It is generally believed that the judicial review of agency rulemakings helps protect the public interest against industry capture. Yet very little empirical research has been done to assess the accuracy of this conventional wisdom. This Study examines the entire set of air toxic emission regulations promulgated by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), with particular attention to those rules appealed to judgment in the court of appeals, and discovers significant disconnects between popular understanding of judicial review and rulemaking reality. Of these air toxic rules (N=90), the courts were summoned to review only a small fraction (8%), despite evidence that many air toxic rules may have problems, at least from the public interest ...
In today’s political climate, regulatory agencies often take center stage in ideological warfare bet...
The article discusses American Trucking Associations v EPA, in which a two-judge majority of a DC Ci...
Intervention by the federal coutts in regulatory policymaking has increased markedly, in both quanti...
It is generally believed that the judicial review of agency rulemakings helps protect the public int...
Over the last fifty years, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has found itself repeatedl...
This work is the first comprehensive analysis of the impact of federal court decisions on the United...
Political ideology has long been associated with the manner in which judges make judicial decisions....
The role of generalist courts in reviewing the work of expert agencies is generally portrayed as ei...
The principles that govern judicial power in reviewing challenged administrative rules have never be...
The proper role of the courts in our system of government has long been the source of considerable c...
This study updates an article published a decade ago by the same authors. It presents a systematic a...
Full-text available at SSRN. See link in this record.The proper role of the courts in our system of ...
This Article assesses the impact of judicial review on one of the nation’s foundational environmenta...
In administrative process sunlight may be the best disinfectant, but as Professor Strauss notes, the...
This Article addresses the possibility, under the prevailing understanding of NEPA, that an agency m...
In today’s political climate, regulatory agencies often take center stage in ideological warfare bet...
The article discusses American Trucking Associations v EPA, in which a two-judge majority of a DC Ci...
Intervention by the federal coutts in regulatory policymaking has increased markedly, in both quanti...
It is generally believed that the judicial review of agency rulemakings helps protect the public int...
Over the last fifty years, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has found itself repeatedl...
This work is the first comprehensive analysis of the impact of federal court decisions on the United...
Political ideology has long been associated with the manner in which judges make judicial decisions....
The role of generalist courts in reviewing the work of expert agencies is generally portrayed as ei...
The principles that govern judicial power in reviewing challenged administrative rules have never be...
The proper role of the courts in our system of government has long been the source of considerable c...
This study updates an article published a decade ago by the same authors. It presents a systematic a...
Full-text available at SSRN. See link in this record.The proper role of the courts in our system of ...
This Article assesses the impact of judicial review on one of the nation’s foundational environmenta...
In administrative process sunlight may be the best disinfectant, but as Professor Strauss notes, the...
This Article addresses the possibility, under the prevailing understanding of NEPA, that an agency m...
In today’s political climate, regulatory agencies often take center stage in ideological warfare bet...
The article discusses American Trucking Associations v EPA, in which a two-judge majority of a DC Ci...
Intervention by the federal coutts in regulatory policymaking has increased markedly, in both quanti...