This Essay responds to the 2014 Duke Law Journal Administrative Law Symposium. Its principal contention is that courts and other commentators should give due weight to the history and virtues of the evolution of administrative law in the United States—and consider embracing the pragmatism and flexibility that it enables—in applying general principles of administrative law in the tax context
American administrative law has long been characterized by two distinct traditions: the positivist a...
During the past decade, administrative law has experienced remarkable development. It has consistent...
The list of recognised grounds of judicial review has remained constant in England and Wales for sev...
This Essay responds to the 2014 Duke Law Journal Administrative Law Symposium. Its principal content...
How administrative law applies to tax rulemaking is an open and contested question. The resolution o...
This essay is Professor Pierce’s contribution to the annual Duke Law Journal symposium on administra...
The past decade has been a tumultuous and energized period in the study of administrative law and re...
The tax administration is at risk of an overcorrection with respect to its rulemaking process. Tax p...
This paper examines the arguments found in what has become known as the anti-tax exceptionalism lite...
The author explores whether legal pragmatism may function as a useful and adequate explanatory model...
I decided that I would spend some time today explaining what I mean by this notion of pragmatism in ...
This article draws out the ways in which Justice Rothstein grappled with complexity in administrativ...
This Article argues that it is misleading to declare the death of tax exceptionalism and that struct...
In its 2011 decision in Mayo Foundation for Education and Research v. United States,\u27 the Supreme...
This article is an invited reply to an article in the Minnesota Law Review regarding whether the “re...
American administrative law has long been characterized by two distinct traditions: the positivist a...
During the past decade, administrative law has experienced remarkable development. It has consistent...
The list of recognised grounds of judicial review has remained constant in England and Wales for sev...
This Essay responds to the 2014 Duke Law Journal Administrative Law Symposium. Its principal content...
How administrative law applies to tax rulemaking is an open and contested question. The resolution o...
This essay is Professor Pierce’s contribution to the annual Duke Law Journal symposium on administra...
The past decade has been a tumultuous and energized period in the study of administrative law and re...
The tax administration is at risk of an overcorrection with respect to its rulemaking process. Tax p...
This paper examines the arguments found in what has become known as the anti-tax exceptionalism lite...
The author explores whether legal pragmatism may function as a useful and adequate explanatory model...
I decided that I would spend some time today explaining what I mean by this notion of pragmatism in ...
This article draws out the ways in which Justice Rothstein grappled with complexity in administrativ...
This Article argues that it is misleading to declare the death of tax exceptionalism and that struct...
In its 2011 decision in Mayo Foundation for Education and Research v. United States,\u27 the Supreme...
This article is an invited reply to an article in the Minnesota Law Review regarding whether the “re...
American administrative law has long been characterized by two distinct traditions: the positivist a...
During the past decade, administrative law has experienced remarkable development. It has consistent...
The list of recognised grounds of judicial review has remained constant in England and Wales for sev...