Agencies possess enormous regulatory discretion. This discretion allows executive branch agencies in particular to insulate their decisions from presidential review by raising the costs of such review. They can do so, for example, through variations in policymaking form, cost-benefit analysis quality, timing strategies, and institutional coalition-building. This Article seeks to help shift the literature\u27s focus on courtcentered agency behavior to consider instead the role of the President under current executive orders. Specifically, the Article marshals public-choice insights to offer an analytic framework for what it calls agency self-insulation under presidential review, illustrates the phenomenon, and assesses some normative implica...
Despite the prevailing focus of administrative law on judicial review of agency discretion, scholars...
Presidential administration is more entrenched and expansive than ever. Most significant policymakin...
For decades, presidential scholars have posed various theories of what makes the President of the Un...
Agencies possess enormous regulatory discretion. This discretion allows executive branch agencies in...
Scholars and courts have divided views on whether presidential supervision enhances the legitimacy o...
Over the past quarter century, administrative law scholars have observed the President’s growing con...
Presidents Reagan and Clinton laid the foundation for strong presidential control over the administr...
From the inception of the administrative state, scholars have proposed various models of agency deci...
A significant concern of administrative law is the status of independent agencies—agencies that are ...
The continuing debate over the President’s directive authority is but one of the many separation-of-...
This Article addresses the substantial legal problems posed by Executive Order 12,291. Part I argues...
A Senate bill introduced in August could reshape U.S. administrative law, further burdening an alrea...
Beginning with President Ronald Reagan, presidents of both political parties increasingly have relie...
Courts reviewing agency action frequently point to superior political accountability and expertise a...
Scholars, lawyers, and, indeed, the public at large increasingly worry about what purposive presiden...
Despite the prevailing focus of administrative law on judicial review of agency discretion, scholars...
Presidential administration is more entrenched and expansive than ever. Most significant policymakin...
For decades, presidential scholars have posed various theories of what makes the President of the Un...
Agencies possess enormous regulatory discretion. This discretion allows executive branch agencies in...
Scholars and courts have divided views on whether presidential supervision enhances the legitimacy o...
Over the past quarter century, administrative law scholars have observed the President’s growing con...
Presidents Reagan and Clinton laid the foundation for strong presidential control over the administr...
From the inception of the administrative state, scholars have proposed various models of agency deci...
A significant concern of administrative law is the status of independent agencies—agencies that are ...
The continuing debate over the President’s directive authority is but one of the many separation-of-...
This Article addresses the substantial legal problems posed by Executive Order 12,291. Part I argues...
A Senate bill introduced in August could reshape U.S. administrative law, further burdening an alrea...
Beginning with President Ronald Reagan, presidents of both political parties increasingly have relie...
Courts reviewing agency action frequently point to superior political accountability and expertise a...
Scholars, lawyers, and, indeed, the public at large increasingly worry about what purposive presiden...
Despite the prevailing focus of administrative law on judicial review of agency discretion, scholars...
Presidential administration is more entrenched and expansive than ever. Most significant policymakin...
For decades, presidential scholars have posed various theories of what makes the President of the Un...