For more than seventy years, courts have deferred to reasonable agency interpretations of ambiguous regulations. The Auer principle, as it is now called, has attracted academic criticism and some skepticism within the Supreme Court. But the principle is entirely correct. In the absence of a clear congressional direction, courts should assume that because of their specialized competence, and their greater accountability, agencies are in the best position to decide on the meaning of ambiguous terms. The recent challenges to the Auer principle rest on fragile foundations, including an anachronistic understanding of the nature of interpretation, an overheated argument about the separation of powers, and an empirically unfounded and logically we...
In Kisor v. Wilkie, the U.S. Supreme Court narrowly retained a controversial form of deference to ag...
The rule that reviewing courts must defer to agencies’ interpretations of their own regulations has ...
In this essay, Pierce and Weiss report the results of a study of judicial review of agency interpret...
The U.S. Supreme Court yesterday granted review in a highly-anticipated case that squarely presents ...
The most familiar doctrine in administrative law is Chevron deference: when Congress leaves an ambig...
Auer v. Robbins requires federal courts to defer to federal agency interpretations of ambiguous regu...
At the dawn of the modern administrative state, the Supreme Court held, in Bowles v. Seminole Rock &...
Together with the better-known Chevron deference rule, the doctrine articulated in Auer v. Robbins t...
Auer deference holds that reviewing courts should defer to agencies when the latter interpret their...
Auer deference holds that reviewing courts should defer to agencies when the latter interpret their ...
Deference doctrines should be understood in light of the Administrative Procedures Act’s distinction...
Under the “Auer doctrine,” named for the 1997 decision Auer v. Robbins, courts accept an agency’s in...
Agencies can interpret ambiguous statutes and regulations due to their expertise in executing comple...
Justice Neil Gorsuch’s criticism of courts’ practice of giving special weight to agency interpretati...
Auer deference, i.e. the extent to which courts defer to an agency’s interpretation of its own ambig...
In Kisor v. Wilkie, the U.S. Supreme Court narrowly retained a controversial form of deference to ag...
The rule that reviewing courts must defer to agencies’ interpretations of their own regulations has ...
In this essay, Pierce and Weiss report the results of a study of judicial review of agency interpret...
The U.S. Supreme Court yesterday granted review in a highly-anticipated case that squarely presents ...
The most familiar doctrine in administrative law is Chevron deference: when Congress leaves an ambig...
Auer v. Robbins requires federal courts to defer to federal agency interpretations of ambiguous regu...
At the dawn of the modern administrative state, the Supreme Court held, in Bowles v. Seminole Rock &...
Together with the better-known Chevron deference rule, the doctrine articulated in Auer v. Robbins t...
Auer deference holds that reviewing courts should defer to agencies when the latter interpret their...
Auer deference holds that reviewing courts should defer to agencies when the latter interpret their ...
Deference doctrines should be understood in light of the Administrative Procedures Act’s distinction...
Under the “Auer doctrine,” named for the 1997 decision Auer v. Robbins, courts accept an agency’s in...
Agencies can interpret ambiguous statutes and regulations due to their expertise in executing comple...
Justice Neil Gorsuch’s criticism of courts’ practice of giving special weight to agency interpretati...
Auer deference, i.e. the extent to which courts defer to an agency’s interpretation of its own ambig...
In Kisor v. Wilkie, the U.S. Supreme Court narrowly retained a controversial form of deference to ag...
The rule that reviewing courts must defer to agencies’ interpretations of their own regulations has ...
In this essay, Pierce and Weiss report the results of a study of judicial review of agency interpret...