For more than one hundred years, Congress has experimented with review of agency action by single-judge district courts, multiple-judge district courts, and direct review by circuit courts. This tinkering has not given way to a stable design. Rather than settling on a uniform scheme—or at least a scheme with a discernible organizing principle—Congress has left litigants with a jurisdictional maze that varies unpredictably across and within statutes and agencies.In this Article, we offer a fresh look at the theoretical and empirical factors that ought to inform the allocation of the judicial power between district and circuit courts in suits challenging agency action. We conclude that the current scheme is both incoherent and, to the extent ...
According to a number of studies and commentators, a serious caseload crisis faces the federal court...
In a refreshingly candid article, Chief Judge Wald of the D.C. Circuit noted in 1986: The flow of m...
A cornerstone of the United States Constitution is its separation of powers among the legislative, e...
For more than one hundred years, Congress has experimented with review of agency action by single-ju...
Professors Currie and Goodman present a comprehensive analysis of the variables that must be isolate...
Fred Weaver believed he had a case against the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) b...
Scholars focusing on court-agency relationships at the federal level have generally neglected the ro...
28 U.S.C. § 1291 vests jurisdiction in the United States Circuit Courts of Appeal to hear “appeals f...
“Presidential administration” has been discussed for the last twenty years. However, scholars have n...
One of the subthemes in the delegation debate concerns the importance of judicial review. The Suprem...
For the past few years the Supreme Court has been struggling with issues of government structure so ...
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit is unique among federal courts, well known for an unu...
From time to time, a federal court of appeals may want the Supreme Court to take a case because it i...
In the last five years, the Supreme Court has had a frenzied approach to judicial review of agency a...
Judicial review of administrative decision making is an essential institutional check on agency powe...
According to a number of studies and commentators, a serious caseload crisis faces the federal court...
In a refreshingly candid article, Chief Judge Wald of the D.C. Circuit noted in 1986: The flow of m...
A cornerstone of the United States Constitution is its separation of powers among the legislative, e...
For more than one hundred years, Congress has experimented with review of agency action by single-ju...
Professors Currie and Goodman present a comprehensive analysis of the variables that must be isolate...
Fred Weaver believed he had a case against the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) b...
Scholars focusing on court-agency relationships at the federal level have generally neglected the ro...
28 U.S.C. § 1291 vests jurisdiction in the United States Circuit Courts of Appeal to hear “appeals f...
“Presidential administration” has been discussed for the last twenty years. However, scholars have n...
One of the subthemes in the delegation debate concerns the importance of judicial review. The Suprem...
For the past few years the Supreme Court has been struggling with issues of government structure so ...
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit is unique among federal courts, well known for an unu...
From time to time, a federal court of appeals may want the Supreme Court to take a case because it i...
In the last five years, the Supreme Court has had a frenzied approach to judicial review of agency a...
Judicial review of administrative decision making is an essential institutional check on agency powe...
According to a number of studies and commentators, a serious caseload crisis faces the federal court...
In a refreshingly candid article, Chief Judge Wald of the D.C. Circuit noted in 1986: The flow of m...
A cornerstone of the United States Constitution is its separation of powers among the legislative, e...