Determining the standard of review for administrative actions has commanded judicial and scholarly interest like few other topics. Notwithstanding the extensive debates, far less consideration has been given to the unique features of agencies’ deviations from their own precedents. In this article we examine this puzzle of administrative change. By change, we mean a reversal of the agency’s former views about the best way to implement and interpret its regulatory mandate. We trace the lineage of administrative change at the Supreme Court and analyze features that distinguish agency reversals from other administrative actions. In particular, we contend that because administrative agencies have been given authority to make official pronounceme...
The Administrative Procedure Act of 1946 (APA) is a “super-statute,” creating a robust, enduring gov...
The law governing administrative agency policy change and the checking of unjustified inconsistency ...
This dissertation reassesses the importance of flexibility in ensuring the legitimacy of the adminis...
Determining the standard of review for administrative actions has commanded judicial and scholarly i...
The modern administrative state has changed substantially since Congress enacted the Administrative ...
In 1984, the Supreme Court adopted a new framework for determining when courts should defer to inter...
Full-text available at SSRN. See link in this record.It was not supposed to be like this. In Chevron...
The reality of the modern administrative state diverges considerably from the series of assumptions ...
How much deference — or what kind — should courts give to longstanding agency interpretations of sta...
This Article examines three facets of the relationship between statutory interpretation and the law ...
“Presidential administration” has been discussed for the last twenty years. However, scholars have n...
As a field of legal study and practice, administrative law rests on the premise that legal principle...
article published in law reviewThis Article contends that the current law governing judicial review ...
This Article juxtaposes the recent debates about statutory interpretation and the judicial uses of l...
The Supreme Court’s willingness to defer to agency interpretations of ambiguous statutes has vacilla...
The Administrative Procedure Act of 1946 (APA) is a “super-statute,” creating a robust, enduring gov...
The law governing administrative agency policy change and the checking of unjustified inconsistency ...
This dissertation reassesses the importance of flexibility in ensuring the legitimacy of the adminis...
Determining the standard of review for administrative actions has commanded judicial and scholarly i...
The modern administrative state has changed substantially since Congress enacted the Administrative ...
In 1984, the Supreme Court adopted a new framework for determining when courts should defer to inter...
Full-text available at SSRN. See link in this record.It was not supposed to be like this. In Chevron...
The reality of the modern administrative state diverges considerably from the series of assumptions ...
How much deference — or what kind — should courts give to longstanding agency interpretations of sta...
This Article examines three facets of the relationship between statutory interpretation and the law ...
“Presidential administration” has been discussed for the last twenty years. However, scholars have n...
As a field of legal study and practice, administrative law rests on the premise that legal principle...
article published in law reviewThis Article contends that the current law governing judicial review ...
This Article juxtaposes the recent debates about statutory interpretation and the judicial uses of l...
The Supreme Court’s willingness to defer to agency interpretations of ambiguous statutes has vacilla...
The Administrative Procedure Act of 1946 (APA) is a “super-statute,” creating a robust, enduring gov...
The law governing administrative agency policy change and the checking of unjustified inconsistency ...
This dissertation reassesses the importance of flexibility in ensuring the legitimacy of the adminis...