Notice & Comment

Notice & Comment

Notice & Comment

Moratoria After Murphy, by Jared Riggs

This piece argues that Congress may invalidate new AI regulation through a moratorium or preemption without running afoul of the anticommandeering doctrine. As AI systems grow in capability, importance, and risk, states are increasingly seeking to regulate them. Illinois bans AI use in therapy. California requires large AI developers to disclose their safety policies. Several […]

Notice & Comment

Administrative Law SSRN Reading List, October 2025 Edition

Here is the October 2025 Edition of the most-downloaded recent papers (those announced in the last 60 days) from SSRN’s U.S. Administrative Law eJournal, which is edited by Bill Funk. For more on why SSRN and this eJournal are such terrific resources for administrative law scholars and practitioners, check out my first post on the subject here. You can […]

Notice & Comment

Comparative Administrative Law Scholarship Corner (November 2025)

Here is the list of works included in the November 2025 Comparative Administrative Law Scholarship Corner, which is curated by Eduardo Jordão (FGV Law School, Rio de Janeiro), with the assistance of Eduarda Onzi. The Scholarship Corner is a resource provided through the Comparative Administrative Law listserv. For more information about this terrific resource, check out my first […]

Notice & Comment

Trump Regulatory Policy: 2025 Compendium

As part of my prep for this year’s ABA Administrative Law Conference, I put together a list of the regulatory policy documents that have been issued since the start of President Trump’s second term. Looking over these documents, a few themes emerge. First, the assertion of executive power. You can see this in assertions that […]

Notice & Comment

Administrative Crimes Are Unlawful: United States v. Pheasant and the Nondelegation Doctrine, by Nicolas Elliott-Smith

Justice Scalia famously described the Lemon test as a “ghoul in a late-night horror movie that repeatedly sits up in its grave and shuffles abroad, after being repeatedly killed and buried . . .” For many, this aptly describes the nondelegation doctrine—a ghoul that haunts the administrative state. Almost a century has passed since the Supreme Court invoked […]

Notice & Comment

Removal: A Response to Professor Nelson, by Philip Hamburger

In an essay published earlier this fall, Professor Caleb Nelson argues that, as a matter of originalism, the President does not have a constitutional power to remove executive officers. Professor Nelson is a renowned scholar, whose arguments could well influence the Supreme Court in two upcoming removal cases: Trump v. Slaughter and Trump v. Cook. […]

Notice & Comment

Call for Submissions: AALS New Voices in Administrative Law

November 18, 2025, Update: AALS New Voices in Administrative Law seeks more senior commentators! We’ve received a bumper crop of submissions from junior scholars and need more senior commentators.  The New Voices program is scheduled for Tuesday, January 6, 2026, from 4:10 to 5:25 p.m. at the AALS Annual Meeting in New Orleans. If you’re able to join […]

Notice & Comment

D.C. Circuit Review – Reviewed: Planes, Trucks, and an En Banc Denial

The D.C. Circuit decided one merits case involving the Essential Air Service program, stayed an interim final rule governing commercial driver’s licenses, and denied en banc rehearing of the mandamus order in the Alien Enemies Act case. Essential Air Service First, in Southern Airways Express, LLC v. U.S. Department of Transportation, the court unanimously denied a […]

Notice & Comment

Cass Sunstein Keynoting Annual ABA Administrative Law Conference, This Friday, November 21

The ABA Section of Administrative Law and Regulatory Practice is excited to announce that Professor Cass Sunstein will be keynoting the annual ABA Administrative Law Conference, this Friday, November 21st. His remarks will focus on the grand narrative in administrative law: For many decades, administrative law has been clouded, or perhaps haunted, by a Grand […]

Notice & Comment

This Friday, November 21: ABA Administrative Law Conference (with Complimentary CLE)

Each year the ABA Section of Administrative Law and Regulatory Practice hosts a signature conference on administrative law. Since we switched the annual conference online during the COVID-19 pandemic, we have had more than 1,000 attendees at our annual conference. The vast majority of our attendees have been government attorneys. The protracted government shutdown has […]

Notice & Comment

Humphrey’s’ Other Holding, by Jordan Rudinsky

The Supreme Court’s 1935 landmark decision, Humphrey’s Executor, is on the chopping block.  In Trump v. Slaughter, scheduled for argument next month, the Court will consider whether President Trump lawfully removed Rebecca Slaughter from the Federal Trade Commission.  It has directed the parties to brief and argue “whether the statutory removal protections for members of […]

Notice & Comment

The Most Shadowy Ruling, by Alan B. Morrison

There are probably other candidates, but the Supreme Court’s virtually unexplained order of November 6 in Trump v. Orr, allowing the Trump Administration to implement its decision to require trans citizens seeking new or renewed passports to use their gender at birth, instead of their current gender, seems to win the award as the most […]

Notice & Comment

Regulatory Tariffs Can Permissibly Raise Revenue: A Response to Professors Amar

At oral argument in the tariff cases, a so-called “donut hole” argument was raised.  The argument maintains it would be highly unlikely for the statutory phrase “regulate … importation” to confer a host of unenumerated powers—including the power to impose licensing fees—but not confer the power to regulate importation by imposing duties (i.e., tariffs).  The donut hole argument […]

Notice & Comment

Navigating the Web of Agency Authority with AI, by Patrick A. McLaughlin & Mitchell Scacchi

Despite the overwhelming concern over the use of artificial intelligence, one of the most promising use cases for AI is regulatory reform. Regulatory accumulation — the slow accumulation of rules, related guidance, case law, and specialized knowledge — has created a knowledge base that no human brain could contain, let alone comprehensively analyze. AI, on […]