Street‐level interpretation and enforcement are critical to defining the meaning of law. To understand street‐level regulatory decisions, prior studies have highlighted internal office conditions, neglecting the influence that peer offices can have. This study examines the role of horizontal inter‐office interaction among frontline offices and illustrates how and under what conditions it shapes the meaning of law. Drawing on qualitative and quantitative data on Japan's Soil Contamination Countermeasures Act, this study reveals that inter‐office interaction occurs within fixed groups and comes to shape shared interpretations of law that regulators believe are legally valid. This implies that under legal ambiguity, inter‐office interactions d...
This Article proposes a new approach to analyzing state compliance with international obligations, p...
The governance of front-line professionals is a persistent organizational problem. Regulations desi...
This paper offers what we hope is a constructive contribution to the debate about whether legal scho...
Street‐level interpretation and enforcement are critical to defining the meaning of law. To understa...
How do frontline regulatory offices make sense of and enforce new ambiguous statutes? In order to un...
Looking inside organizations at the different positions, expertise, and autonomy of the actors, the ...
Regulatory diffusion occurs when an agency adopts a substantially similar rule to that of another ag...
In institutional theory, it is a challenge to explain how rulesetting occurs in transnational contex...
Everyone experiences, at a certain point in life, that what the law states, how public services impl...
© 2018 Dr Michael Rowley FalkInstitutions, in the sense of durable systems of behavioural rules, nor...
The governance of front-line professionals is a persistent organizational problem. Regulations desig...
Theories of regulation conceptualize the task of the agencies of the modern state in terms of the pu...
Using data from a sample of U.S. industrial facilities subject to the federal Clean Air Act from 199...
In addition to regulating different substantive areas, administrative agencies differ in the enforce...
We now live in a regulatory world, where the bulk of federal lawmaking takes place at the bureaucrat...
This Article proposes a new approach to analyzing state compliance with international obligations, p...
The governance of front-line professionals is a persistent organizational problem. Regulations desi...
This paper offers what we hope is a constructive contribution to the debate about whether legal scho...
Street‐level interpretation and enforcement are critical to defining the meaning of law. To understa...
How do frontline regulatory offices make sense of and enforce new ambiguous statutes? In order to un...
Looking inside organizations at the different positions, expertise, and autonomy of the actors, the ...
Regulatory diffusion occurs when an agency adopts a substantially similar rule to that of another ag...
In institutional theory, it is a challenge to explain how rulesetting occurs in transnational contex...
Everyone experiences, at a certain point in life, that what the law states, how public services impl...
© 2018 Dr Michael Rowley FalkInstitutions, in the sense of durable systems of behavioural rules, nor...
The governance of front-line professionals is a persistent organizational problem. Regulations desig...
Theories of regulation conceptualize the task of the agencies of the modern state in terms of the pu...
Using data from a sample of U.S. industrial facilities subject to the federal Clean Air Act from 199...
In addition to regulating different substantive areas, administrative agencies differ in the enforce...
We now live in a regulatory world, where the bulk of federal lawmaking takes place at the bureaucrat...
This Article proposes a new approach to analyzing state compliance with international obligations, p...
The governance of front-line professionals is a persistent organizational problem. Regulations desi...
This paper offers what we hope is a constructive contribution to the debate about whether legal scho...