I am grateful to the Michigan Journal of Environmental & Administrative Law for the opportunity to reply to “Rulemaking vs. Democracy: Judging and Nudging Public Participation That Counts,” a terrific article by Professor Cynthia Farina, Mary Newhart, and Josiah Heidt of the Cornell eRulemaking Institute (“CeRI”). Farina, Newhart, and Heidt’s continuing commitment to structuring public engagement in e-rulemaking, both through scholarship and CeRI’s Regulation Room project, is one of the most hopeful signs for the future of that process. In their Article, the authors are concerned with agency treatment of large volumes of public comments in rulemaking, an increasingly common phenomenon. In the first six months of 2012 alone, a quarter-millio...
A recent panel hosted by the Administrative Conference of the United States explored reforms to impr...
Since the public commenting process for proposed federal regulations became primarily web-based, the...
Falsely generating comments to influence public policy is an old political game. Even in Shakespeare...
I am grateful to the Michigan Journal of Environmental & Administrative Law for the opportunity to r...
Agencies, courts, and academics agree that notice-and-comment rulemaking is not a referendum. But th...
As technology improves, public participation in the notice-and-comment rulemaking process becomes mo...
The Administrative Conference of the United States (ACUS) adopted Recommendation 2021-1 to improve a...
When the U.S. Congress enacted the Administrative Procedure Act (APA) in 1946 one of its most innova...
This Foreword is meant as an initial foray into the question of what agencies should do with mass pu...
The Administrative Procedure Act requires agencies to give the public an opportunity to submit comme...
A number of technological and political forces have transformed the once staid and insider dominated...
“Apolitical”—or being disinterested and uninvolved in politics—is a naïve, anachronistic description...
This Article considers how open government “magical thinking” around technology has infused efforts ...
The notice and comment process was designed—and over time has been understood and touted as a means—...
This essay considers how open government “magical thinking” around technology has infused efforts to...
A recent panel hosted by the Administrative Conference of the United States explored reforms to impr...
Since the public commenting process for proposed federal regulations became primarily web-based, the...
Falsely generating comments to influence public policy is an old political game. Even in Shakespeare...
I am grateful to the Michigan Journal of Environmental & Administrative Law for the opportunity to r...
Agencies, courts, and academics agree that notice-and-comment rulemaking is not a referendum. But th...
As technology improves, public participation in the notice-and-comment rulemaking process becomes mo...
The Administrative Conference of the United States (ACUS) adopted Recommendation 2021-1 to improve a...
When the U.S. Congress enacted the Administrative Procedure Act (APA) in 1946 one of its most innova...
This Foreword is meant as an initial foray into the question of what agencies should do with mass pu...
The Administrative Procedure Act requires agencies to give the public an opportunity to submit comme...
A number of technological and political forces have transformed the once staid and insider dominated...
“Apolitical”—or being disinterested and uninvolved in politics—is a naïve, anachronistic description...
This Article considers how open government “magical thinking” around technology has infused efforts ...
The notice and comment process was designed—and over time has been understood and touted as a means—...
This essay considers how open government “magical thinking” around technology has infused efforts to...
A recent panel hosted by the Administrative Conference of the United States explored reforms to impr...
Since the public commenting process for proposed federal regulations became primarily web-based, the...
Falsely generating comments to influence public policy is an old political game. Even in Shakespeare...