Regulatory bundling is the aggregation or disaggregation of legislative rules by administrative agencies. Agencies, in other words, can bundle what would otherwise be multiple rules into just one rulemaking. Conversely, they can split one rule into several. This observation parallels other recent work on how agencies can aggregate adjudications and enforcement actions but now focuses on legislative rules, the most consequential form of agency action. The topic is timely in light of a recent executive order directing agencies to repeal two regulations for every new one promulgated. Agencies now have a greater incentive to pack regulatory provisions together for every two rules they can repeal
James Hamilton and Christopher Schroeder\u27s (1994) article on agency behavior shed light on the is...
Regulation of business activity is nearly as old as law itself. In the last century, though, the use...
Worldwide, there are approximately 130 jurisdictions with competition laws. The governmental entitie...
Regulatory bundling is the aggregation or disaggregation of legislative rules by administrative agen...
In addition to regulating different substantive areas, administrative agencies differ in the enforce...
In this Article, the authors survey how agencies create substantive regulations through traditional ...
I. Introduction II. The Strands of Modern Regulatory Reform III. The National Environmental Policy A...
Calls for increased regulation are flying fast and furious these days. We use regulation in the Unit...
Businesses are increasingly global. But domestic courts’ jurisdiction remains largely provincial; bo...
Over the past several decades, the scope, reach and cost of federal regulations have increased drama...
Administrative agencies increasingly enlist the judgment of private firms they regulate to achieve p...
After decades of deregulation, the United States seems to be entering a period of re-regulation, reg...
Administrative agencies frequently use guidance documents to set policy broadly and prospectively in...
Regulatory diffusion occurs when an agency adopts a substantially similar rule to that of another ag...
This Article argues that inter-agency coordination is one of the great challenges of modern governan...
James Hamilton and Christopher Schroeder\u27s (1994) article on agency behavior shed light on the is...
Regulation of business activity is nearly as old as law itself. In the last century, though, the use...
Worldwide, there are approximately 130 jurisdictions with competition laws. The governmental entitie...
Regulatory bundling is the aggregation or disaggregation of legislative rules by administrative agen...
In addition to regulating different substantive areas, administrative agencies differ in the enforce...
In this Article, the authors survey how agencies create substantive regulations through traditional ...
I. Introduction II. The Strands of Modern Regulatory Reform III. The National Environmental Policy A...
Calls for increased regulation are flying fast and furious these days. We use regulation in the Unit...
Businesses are increasingly global. But domestic courts’ jurisdiction remains largely provincial; bo...
Over the past several decades, the scope, reach and cost of federal regulations have increased drama...
Administrative agencies increasingly enlist the judgment of private firms they regulate to achieve p...
After decades of deregulation, the United States seems to be entering a period of re-regulation, reg...
Administrative agencies frequently use guidance documents to set policy broadly and prospectively in...
Regulatory diffusion occurs when an agency adopts a substantially similar rule to that of another ag...
This Article argues that inter-agency coordination is one of the great challenges of modern governan...
James Hamilton and Christopher Schroeder\u27s (1994) article on agency behavior shed light on the is...
Regulation of business activity is nearly as old as law itself. In the last century, though, the use...
Worldwide, there are approximately 130 jurisdictions with competition laws. The governmental entitie...