Professor Farina argues that recent proponents of enhanced presidential power overstate the ability of the President to legitimize the regulatory state. It accuses pro-presidentialists of premising their claims on a conception of the will of the people that is neither an accurate description of how citizens actually participate in modern government nor an authentic constitutional understanding of how citizens would consent to public policy decisions. The paper concludes by insisting that no single mode of democratic legitimization can save the regulatory enterprise; rather, administrative law must look to a plurality of institutions and practices that contribute to an ongoing process of legitimizing the administrative state
Our foremost framer of mellifluous titles follows Law\u27s Empire and Life\u27s Dominion with yet an...
Consent decrees raise serious Article III concerns. When litigants agree on their rights and jointly...
This Article presents psychological research that explores the reasons that people have for acceptin...
Professor Farina argues that recent proponents of enhanced presidential power overstate the ability ...
This article’s investigation into the “agency for legitimacy” proceeds in five steps: Part I introdu...
This thesis examines consent as the purported criterion of legitimate political authority and basis...
The continuing debate over the President’s directive authority is but one of the many separation-of-...
What a government of limited powers needs, at the beginning and forever, is some means of satisfying...
This Article argues that, contrary to current practices, constitutional change is legitimate only wh...
The administrative state has been bedeviled by doubts about its democratic legitimacy and its questi...
Written in celebration of Philip Frickey’s many contributions to the legislation literature, this es...
This paper defends the Rule of Law as set of formal attributes that any regular system of law must p...
The principle that government rests on the consent of the governed eventually spread beyond the poli...
Several recent Supreme Court decisions evidence reinvigorated principles of federalism and an increa...
This article examines three indicators of a functioning rule of law state. First, that the executive...
Our foremost framer of mellifluous titles follows Law\u27s Empire and Life\u27s Dominion with yet an...
Consent decrees raise serious Article III concerns. When litigants agree on their rights and jointly...
This Article presents psychological research that explores the reasons that people have for acceptin...
Professor Farina argues that recent proponents of enhanced presidential power overstate the ability ...
This article’s investigation into the “agency for legitimacy” proceeds in five steps: Part I introdu...
This thesis examines consent as the purported criterion of legitimate political authority and basis...
The continuing debate over the President’s directive authority is but one of the many separation-of-...
What a government of limited powers needs, at the beginning and forever, is some means of satisfying...
This Article argues that, contrary to current practices, constitutional change is legitimate only wh...
The administrative state has been bedeviled by doubts about its democratic legitimacy and its questi...
Written in celebration of Philip Frickey’s many contributions to the legislation literature, this es...
This paper defends the Rule of Law as set of formal attributes that any regular system of law must p...
The principle that government rests on the consent of the governed eventually spread beyond the poli...
Several recent Supreme Court decisions evidence reinvigorated principles of federalism and an increa...
This article examines three indicators of a functioning rule of law state. First, that the executive...
Our foremost framer of mellifluous titles follows Law\u27s Empire and Life\u27s Dominion with yet an...
Consent decrees raise serious Article III concerns. When litigants agree on their rights and jointly...
This Article presents psychological research that explores the reasons that people have for acceptin...