Notice & Comment

Notice & Comment

Notice & Comment

Hiring Freezes and Job Offer Revocations, by Nicholas R. Bednar

On Tuesday, many law students received a rather unfortunate email from the Department of Justice’s (DOJ) Office of Attorney Recruitment & Management. The email read: “This email is about your application to the Attorney General’s Honors Program. Pursuant to the hiring freeze announced January 20, 2025, your job offer has been revoked.” Soon, rumors spread […]

Notice & Comment

Agency Heads, Civil Servants, and Trump

This is a quick post to share some easy-to-read explainers about what different agency heads and civil servants do, how the civil service works, and Trump’s early and antagonistic actions towards our civil service system. Sometimes the government can seem like a black box. My view is that as you hear about early actions of […]

Notice & Comment

What’s Up First — MQD or BR? By Randolph May

In a recent post in this space, “The (Likely) End of the FCC’s Long-Running Net Neutrality Saga,” I explained why the Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit’s decision in Ohio Telecom Association v. FCC on January 2 likely signals the end of the FCC’s lengthy history of imposing, abandoning, and reimposing “net neutrality” mandates on Internet service providers, […]

Notice & Comment

Lawyers and Abundance, by Kevin Frazier

Doctors learn about removing stitches. Dentists train to take off those pesky braces. Lawyers, however, spend little of their education studying when a law needs to come off the books. This isn’t a new problem. As noted by Karl Llewellyn in 1935, law students come to think that “for too much law, more law will be […]

Notice & Comment

Call for Papers: “The Future of ‘Hard Look’ Review”

The Supreme Court’s recent decisions on deference and delegation have attracted enormous attention from judges, policymakers, lawyers, and scholars — and rightly so. But those debates have overshadowed other significant shifts in the courts’ review of administrative actions.  Among them is “hard look review”—the courts’ review of an agency’s analysis and explanations, under the Administrative […]

Notice & Comment

Call for Papers: Tenth Annual Administrative Law New Scholarship Roundtable

The University of Michigan Law School is very pleased to host the Tenth Annual Administrative Law New Scholarship Roundtable on May 19-20, 2025. For the past nine years, the Roundtable has offered administrative law scholars an excellent opportunity to get feedback on their work from distinguished scholars in a collaborative setting. Approximately twelve authors will […]

Notice & Comment

Dueling Views on Non-Delegation, by Alan B. Morrison

Six years after the Supreme Court took on the question in Gundy v. United States, 588 U.S. 128 (2019), of when, if ever, Congress has unconstitutionally delegated legislative power to the executive branch, the Court will try again to articulate a standard that a majority of the Court can accept. The case is FCC v. […]

Notice & Comment

ACUS Update: Seeking Consultants for Five New Recommendation Projects

On January 14, 2025, the Administrative Conference of the United States (ACUS) announced that it is seeking researchers to serve as consultants on five new projects directed towards the development of formal recommendations to agencies, Congress, and the President. The consultant(s) selected for each project will, among other things, prepare a report, work with a […]

Notice & Comment

Ad Law Reading Room: “The Administrative State’s Second Face,” by Emily Chertoff and Jessica Bulman-Pozen

Today’s Ad Law Reading Room entry is “The Administrative State’s Second Face,” by Emily Chertoff and Jessica Bulman-Pozen, which is forthcoming in the NYU Law Review. Here is the abstract: We often assume that there is one administrative state, with one body of administrative law that governs it. In fact, the administrative state has two […]

Notice & Comment

A Proportionality Principle for the Nondelegation Doctrine

Today the U.S. Chamber of Commerce filed an amicus curiae brief in support of neither party in FCC v. Consumers’ Research, articulating a proportional approach to the nondelegation doctrine. Here’s the start of the argument: The Constitution vests the Legislature with discretion in making policy and vests the Executive with discretion in executing the law. […]

Notice & Comment

Unpacking the Most Important Paragraph in Loper Bright, by Ellen P. Aprill

Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo, of course, overruled Chevron v. NRDC, ending judicial deference to administrative agencies conferred by ambiguous statutory language. The opinion also acknowledged that in many statutory provisions, Congress delegates discretionary authority to administrative agencies. If so, agencies rather than courts have primary responsibility for interpreting the statutory language. Professor Chris Walker has called […]

Notice & Comment

Call for Papers: “Textualism and Administration After Loper Bright”

The Supreme Court’s recent decision in Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo will fundamentally change the courts’ approach to interpreting regulatory statutes and reviewing the actions of administrative agencies.  The Court renounced Chevron deference: under the APA, “courts must exercise independent judgment in determining the meaning of statutory provisions.”  “In exercising such judgment,” the Court added, “courts may—as they have […]

Notice & Comment

Law of Abundance Conference: A Call for Papers

The following may be of interest to readers of Notice & Comment: With support from the Hewlett Foundation, Nicholas Bagley (Michigan), Zachary Liscow (Yale), and the Niskanen Center will be hosting the Law of Abundance Conference in early 2026.   A nascent movement known as “the Abundance Agenda” or “the State Capacity Movement” is drawing attention to how lackluster […]