Notice & Comment

Notice & Comment

Notice & Comment

N&C 2022 Retrospective

Greetings, All! My name is Elaine Hou, and I am the current student editor for Notice & Comment and the online director for the Yale Journal on Regulation Volume 40. It has been a pleasure and a privilege to serve in this role and to work with our authors and contributors! As I begin to […]

Notice & Comment

Jotwell Administrative Law Section 2022 Year-End Review

Since 2015, I’ve had the privilege of serving as co-editor, currently with the brilliant Miriam Seifter, of the the Administrative Law Section of The Journal of Things We Like (Lots) (“Jotwell”). As I first noted on the blog eight years ago, Jotwell is a terrific resource for administrative law practitioners and scholars. Roughly once a month, Jotwell’s Administrative Law Section […]

Notice & Comment

The Supreme Court Has Not Turned Out the Lights on Chevron, and Lower Courts Should Continue to Apply It, by Donald L. R. Goodson

While reading Isaiah McKinney’s recent piece on Chevron v. Natural Resources Defense Council, I was struck by how different people can see the exact same facts and yet draw such wildly different conclusions from them. Where McKinney sees a problem with lower courts’ applying Chevron while the Supreme Court has relied on it less in […]

Notice & Comment

The Chevron Ball Ended at Midnight, but the Circuits are Still Two-Stepping by Themselves, by Isaiah McKinney

The 1984 case Chevron v. Natural Resources Defense Council is both the most influential and most controversial case in administrative law. It has come under increasingly strong attacks alleging the doctrine is unconstitutional and in violation of the Administrative Procedure Act. The Supreme Court has applied Chevron less and less in the past few terms, […]

Notice & Comment

D.C. Circuit Review – Reviewed: When Exactly Is a Final Rule Final, Part II, or When Is It Too Late To Join a Case Asking When Is It Too Late To Withdraw a Rule?

Humane Society of the United States v. U.S. Department of Agriculture returned this week. D.C. Circuit Reviewer Hyland Hunt wrote an in-depth post on this interesting case earlier this year. As Hyland explained, the case grew out of the longstanding practice by incoming presidential administrations of halting (and, upon review, withdrawing) the outgoing administration’s rules […]

Notice & Comment

The Reasoning State: Theory, Interpretation, and Evidence, by Jed Stiglitz

*This is the ninth and final post in a symposium on Jed Stiglitz’s “The Reasoning State.” For other posts in the series, click here. My main response to this symposium is gratitude. I thank Yale Journal on Regulation and the Notice & Comment editors, and Bridget Dooling especially, for the opportunity to discuss The Reasoning State […]

Notice & Comment

Campaign Legal Center v. DOJ — FOIA Postscript to Department of Commerce v. New York (Part III)

Can an agency properly invoke the deliberative process privilege to shield internal deliberations over a sham memo requesting that another agency take action, knowing that the recipient agency will use the request to hide the real reason for its contemplated action?  Earlier this year, the D.C. Circuit answered in the affirmative. Campaign Legal Center v. […]

Notice & Comment

The Puzzle of Broad Optimality and New Directions for the Administrative State, by Vartan Shadarevian

The administrative state is undergoing a slow but radical transformation. Three seismic shifts are occurring in the administrative state’s set of procedures for deciding when and how to regulate. First, Biden regulators have emphasized the need to evaluate individual regulations on a wider range of criteria, including distributive effects, fairness, and quality of life. The […]