In the opening days of his first term, President Obama proclaimed that his administration would be the most transparent in history, stating that: Transparency promotes accountability and provides information for citizens about what their Government is doing…. My Administration will take appropriate action, consistent with law and policy, to disclose information rapidly in forms that the public can readily find and use. Executive departments and agencies should harness new technologies to put information about their operations and decisions online and readily available to the public. In that spirit, debate continues over incorporation by reference (IBR), an obscure but important administrative law tool that allows federal agencies to build...
During the rulemaking process, commenters sometimes submit confidential commercial information (CCI)...
Each year, federal regulatory agencies create thousands of new rules that affect the economy. When t...
On October 2, the American National Standards Institute (ANSI) held an open forum in Washington, D.C...
Federal agencies have relied upon private sector expertise and resources by incorporating thousands ...
Agencies have incorporated – but only by reference – over 9,000 privately drafted standards into bin...
The Regulatory Review is pleased to publish this series facilitating further debate over the practic...
Debate over public access to all regulatory standards continued recently before a U.S. House of Repr...
“We decline to define ‘reasonably available’” is perhaps the most remarkable sentence to appear in t...
Any professional working in highly regulated areas of the economy should know about the practice of ...
Incremental change is often the best way—and sometimes the only way—to address a difficult policy is...
As one of the most widely-reprinted New Yorker cartoons reminds us, “on the Internet, nobody knows y...
Expanding on their well-known law review article, Omri Ben-Shahar and Carl E. Schneider’s new book p...
Countless outside watchdog groups suggest how government can improve, but one group does so from wit...
To save resources and build on private expertise, federal agencies have incorporated privately draft...
As federal rulemaking dockets and regulations have moved online, a previously overlooked issue has e...
During the rulemaking process, commenters sometimes submit confidential commercial information (CCI)...
Each year, federal regulatory agencies create thousands of new rules that affect the economy. When t...
On October 2, the American National Standards Institute (ANSI) held an open forum in Washington, D.C...
Federal agencies have relied upon private sector expertise and resources by incorporating thousands ...
Agencies have incorporated – but only by reference – over 9,000 privately drafted standards into bin...
The Regulatory Review is pleased to publish this series facilitating further debate over the practic...
Debate over public access to all regulatory standards continued recently before a U.S. House of Repr...
“We decline to define ‘reasonably available’” is perhaps the most remarkable sentence to appear in t...
Any professional working in highly regulated areas of the economy should know about the practice of ...
Incremental change is often the best way—and sometimes the only way—to address a difficult policy is...
As one of the most widely-reprinted New Yorker cartoons reminds us, “on the Internet, nobody knows y...
Expanding on their well-known law review article, Omri Ben-Shahar and Carl E. Schneider’s new book p...
Countless outside watchdog groups suggest how government can improve, but one group does so from wit...
To save resources and build on private expertise, federal agencies have incorporated privately draft...
As federal rulemaking dockets and regulations have moved online, a previously overlooked issue has e...
During the rulemaking process, commenters sometimes submit confidential commercial information (CCI)...
Each year, federal regulatory agencies create thousands of new rules that affect the economy. When t...
On October 2, the American National Standards Institute (ANSI) held an open forum in Washington, D.C...