The revolving door between the government and the private sector has long been presumed to lead to the capture of regulators by industry interests. A growing body of empirical literature, however, either finds no conclusive evidence of a capture effect or finds evidence of an opposite effect that the revolving door indeed results in more aggressive, not less aggressive, regulatory actions. To account for these incongruous results, scholars have formulated and tested a new “human-capital” theory positing that revolving-door regulators have incentives to be more aggressive toward the regulated industry as a way of signaling their qualifications to prospective industry employers. But even with the insights offered by the human-capital theory, ...
The last quarter of a century has seen two broad waves of regulatory reform. The first wave, which s...
Conventional capture models rely on the idea that regulator is induced to lenient behavior by the re...
This Article demonstrates that a new revolving door is emerging between environmental-advocacy group...
The revolving door between the government and the private sector has long been presumed to lead to t...
The revolving door phenomenon, in which senior public officials transfer from the public service to ...
Public confidence in the integrity of our public officials is necessary for effective government. Th...
There is a revolving door between federal agencies and the industries regulated by them. Often, at...
The revolving door refers to the movement of personnel between government and business. The revolvin...
The prominence of lobbying activity in Washington, D.C., is well-known and often discussed by pundit...
“Revolving doors” is a term that is used to describe the career pathways frequently navigated by pub...
PUBLIC CONFIDENCE IN THE INTEGRITY OF THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT is alarmingly low. While numerous facto...
It is a common phenomenon in all areas of regulation that regulators become captured by the industry...
I develop a model of regulatory behavior as it relates to misreporting and regulatory disclosure. Th...
A great deal of skepticism toward administrative agencies stems from the widespread perception that ...
Fears have abounded for years that the sweet spot for capture of regulatory agencies is the revolvi...
The last quarter of a century has seen two broad waves of regulatory reform. The first wave, which s...
Conventional capture models rely on the idea that regulator is induced to lenient behavior by the re...
This Article demonstrates that a new revolving door is emerging between environmental-advocacy group...
The revolving door between the government and the private sector has long been presumed to lead to t...
The revolving door phenomenon, in which senior public officials transfer from the public service to ...
Public confidence in the integrity of our public officials is necessary for effective government. Th...
There is a revolving door between federal agencies and the industries regulated by them. Often, at...
The revolving door refers to the movement of personnel between government and business. The revolvin...
The prominence of lobbying activity in Washington, D.C., is well-known and often discussed by pundit...
“Revolving doors” is a term that is used to describe the career pathways frequently navigated by pub...
PUBLIC CONFIDENCE IN THE INTEGRITY OF THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT is alarmingly low. While numerous facto...
It is a common phenomenon in all areas of regulation that regulators become captured by the industry...
I develop a model of regulatory behavior as it relates to misreporting and regulatory disclosure. Th...
A great deal of skepticism toward administrative agencies stems from the widespread perception that ...
Fears have abounded for years that the sweet spot for capture of regulatory agencies is the revolvi...
The last quarter of a century has seen two broad waves of regulatory reform. The first wave, which s...
Conventional capture models rely on the idea that regulator is induced to lenient behavior by the re...
This Article demonstrates that a new revolving door is emerging between environmental-advocacy group...