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Articles 1 - 30 of 195
Full-Text Articles in Law
Infrostructure(S): Administering Information, Kali Murray
Infrostructure(S): Administering Information, Kali Murray
Buffalo Law Review
This Article, Infrostructure(s): Administering Information, considers how authoritative entities generate, manage, and produce informational structures, facilities, and architectures that support market creation and creative economy decision-making between private parties and entities. The term infrostructure, as opposed to other terms, such as infostructure and infosphere, suggests that infrostructures play vital roles in modern democratic life including producing new information resources, facilitating private transactions between private parties, and building the administrative state.
This Article is divided into two parts. Part I discusses how information regulation is mediated through information forms and information systems with a focus on the materialities of information forms …
Statutory Interpretation And Chevron Deference In The Appellate Courts: An Empirical Analysis, Amy Semet
Statutory Interpretation And Chevron Deference In The Appellate Courts: An Empirical Analysis, Amy Semet
Journal Articles
What statutory methods does an appellate court use in reviewing decisions of an administrative agency? Further, in doing this review, are appellate judges more likely to use certain statutory methods when they expressly cite the Chevron two-step framework than if they do not? This Article explores the answers to these questions using an original database of over 200 statutory interpretation cases culled from more than 2,500 cases decided in appellate courts reviewing National Labor Relations Board (NLRB or the Board) adjudications from 1994 through 2020. In particular, the study examined the use of text, language canons, substantive canons, legislative history, …
An Ethical Gap In Agency Adjudication, Louis J. Virelli Iii
An Ethical Gap In Agency Adjudication, Louis J. Virelli Iii
Buffalo Law Review
There is an ongoing crisis of confidence in American government. Accusations of incompetence and political self-dealing dominate news cycles as public institutions seek to combat—with varying degrees of success—the public health and economic consequences of a global pandemic. Highlighted in this struggle is the larger issue of the importance of integrity to the efficacy and legitimacy of administrative government. This is especially true for agency adjudication, as it is the form of agency action that most directly impacts individuals. Recusal—the process by which an adjudicator is removed, voluntarily or involuntarily, from a specific proceeding—is a time-honored way of protecting the …
Muddying The Waters: The Need For More Clarity Under The Clean Water Act, Georgia D. Reid
Muddying The Waters: The Need For More Clarity Under The Clean Water Act, Georgia D. Reid
Buffalo Environmental Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Public Comments Run Amok: Reforming The Notice And Comment Processto Help Reduce The Negative Effects Of Mass And Fake Comments, Gwendolyn Mckee Savitz
Public Comments Run Amok: Reforming The Notice And Comment Processto Help Reduce The Negative Effects Of Mass And Fake Comments, Gwendolyn Mckee Savitz
Buffalo Law Review
The Administrative Procedure Act requires agencies to give the public an opportunity to submit comments in response to proposed regulations. When the proposed regulations address particularly hot-button issues, agencies can be flooded with millions of comments fromthe public in response. This most memorably occurred twice when JohnOliver exhorted viewers of his show to write in to protect net neutrality.The vast majority of the millions of comments submitted in both processes were duplicative, providing no benefit for the agency; sent inunder the name of a person who did not submit them; or both. If the vastmajority of the comments coming in …
Whither The Neutral Agency? Rethinking Bias In Regulatory Administration, Daniel B. Rodriguez
Whither The Neutral Agency? Rethinking Bias In Regulatory Administration, Daniel B. Rodriguez
Buffalo Law Review
No abstract provided.
An Approach To Improving Judicial Review Of The Apa’S “Good Cause” Exception To Notice-And-Comment Rulemaking, Kevin Hartnett Jr.
An Approach To Improving Judicial Review Of The Apa’S “Good Cause” Exception To Notice-And-Comment Rulemaking, Kevin Hartnett Jr.
Buffalo Law Review
No abstract provided.
Does The Ftc Have Blood On Its Hands? An Analysis Of Ftc Overreach And Abuse Of Power After Liu, Angel Reyes, Benjamin Hunter
Does The Ftc Have Blood On Its Hands? An Analysis Of Ftc Overreach And Abuse Of Power After Liu, Angel Reyes, Benjamin Hunter
Buffalo Law Review
Recent cases have called the Federal Trade Commission’s (“FTC”) enforcement methods into question. After a circuit split developed in the wake of the Seventh Circuit’s decision in Federal Trade Commission v. Credit Bureau Center, L.L.C., the Supreme Court responded by granting certiorari and consolidating the case with AMG Capital Management, L.L.C. v. Federal Trade Commission. The issue in these cases is whether Section 13(b) of the FTC Act authorizes the FTC to bypass the due process safeguards mandated by Congress in Sections 5 and 19 of the FTC Act and, in doing so, to conduct warrantless searches and seizures, unilaterally …
Somebody Call My Doctor: Repeal Of The Treating Physician Rule In Social Security Disability Adjudication, Charles Terranova
Somebody Call My Doctor: Repeal Of The Treating Physician Rule In Social Security Disability Adjudication, Charles Terranova
Buffalo Law Review
No abstract provided.
Porous Bureaucracy: Legitimating The Administrative State In Taiwan, Anya Bernstein
Porous Bureaucracy: Legitimating The Administrative State In Taiwan, Anya Bernstein
Journal Articles
Scholars and politicians have sometimes presented bureaucracy as inherently conflicting with democracy. Notably, bureaucrats themselves are rarely consulted about that relationship. In contrast, I draw on interviews and participant observation to illuminate how government administrators understand their own place in democratic government in Taiwan, one of the few successful third-wave democracies. The administrators I work with root their own legitimacy not in separated powers or autonomous expertise, but in their ongoing collaboration with legislators and publics. They define their own accountability not just as executive legislative mandates but as producing them in the first place, and figure bureaucracy as a …
Nondelegation And The Major Questions Doctrine: Displacing Interpretive Power, Marla D. Tortorice
Nondelegation And The Major Questions Doctrine: Displacing Interpretive Power, Marla D. Tortorice
Buffalo Law Review
No abstract provided.
An Empirical Examination Of Agency Statutory Interpretation, Amy Semet
An Empirical Examination Of Agency Statutory Interpretation, Amy Semet
Journal Articles
How do administrative agencies interpret statutes? Despite the theoretical treatment scholars offer on how agencies construe statutes, far less is known empirically about administrative statutory interpretation even though agencies play a critical role in interpreting statutes. This Article looks behind the black box of agency statutory interpretation to review how administrative agencies use canons and other tools of statutory interpretation to decide cases. Surveying over 7,000 cases heard by the National Labor Relations Board (“NLRB”) from 1993-2016, I analyze the statutory methodologies the Board uses in its decisions in order to uncover patterns of how the Board interprets statutes over …
Interpenetration Of Powers: Channels And Obstacles For Populist Impulses, Anya Bernstein
Interpenetration Of Powers: Channels And Obstacles For Populist Impulses, Anya Bernstein
Journal Articles
Discussions of populism often focus on the most visible points of executive power: individual leaders. Yet individual leaders only accomplish things through administrative apparatuses that enable and support their power. Rejecting a political theology that imagines sovereignty as inhering in a single decision-maker, this article turns to political pragmatics focused on the people who populate the government. I draw on interviews with administrators in the government of two successful but quite different democracies. The first is the United States, an old, flagship democratic state. The second is Taiwan, which transitioned from a four-decade military dictatorship to a vibrant democracy in …
Defenders Of Wildlife V. Jewell: Environmentalists Win The Latest Battle In The Fight Over Gray Wolves, But Who Will Win The War?, Rachel Kenigsberg
Defenders Of Wildlife V. Jewell: Environmentalists Win The Latest Battle In The Fight Over Gray Wolves, But Who Will Win The War?, Rachel Kenigsberg
Buffalo Environmental Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Spotlight On Objective Evidence Of Nonobviousnes In Aia Post-Grant Proceedings, Shing-Yi (Cindy) Cheng, Li Feng, Stacy Lewis, Tom Irving
Spotlight On Objective Evidence Of Nonobviousnes In Aia Post-Grant Proceedings, Shing-Yi (Cindy) Cheng, Li Feng, Stacy Lewis, Tom Irving
Buffalo Intellectual Property Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Navigating The Limitations On Discovery In Aia Post-Grant Proceedings, Mary R. Henninger, Jill K. Macalpine, Amelia Feulner Baur, Anthony A. Hartmann, Lara C. Kelley, Rebecca M. Mcneill, P. Andrew Riley, Michael A. Stramiello
Navigating The Limitations On Discovery In Aia Post-Grant Proceedings, Mary R. Henninger, Jill K. Macalpine, Amelia Feulner Baur, Anthony A. Hartmann, Lara C. Kelley, Rebecca M. Mcneill, P. Andrew Riley, Michael A. Stramiello
Buffalo Intellectual Property Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Spotlight On Claim Construction Before Ptab, James Stein, Jennifer Gupta, Hojung Cho, Stacy Lewis, Tom Irving
Spotlight On Claim Construction Before Ptab, James Stein, Jennifer Gupta, Hojung Cho, Stacy Lewis, Tom Irving
Buffalo Intellectual Property Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Stay Awhile: The Evolving Law Of District Court Stays In Light Of Inter Partes Review, Post-Grant Review, And Covered Business Method Post-Grant Review, Jonathan Stroud, Linda Thayer, Jeffrey C. Totten
Stay Awhile: The Evolving Law Of District Court Stays In Light Of Inter Partes Review, Post-Grant Review, And Covered Business Method Post-Grant Review, Jonathan Stroud, Linda Thayer, Jeffrey C. Totten
Buffalo Intellectual Property Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Amending Rather Than Cancelling Claims In Inter Partes Reviews, Stacy Lewis, Tom Irving
Amending Rather Than Cancelling Claims In Inter Partes Reviews, Stacy Lewis, Tom Irving
Buffalo Intellectual Property Law Journal
No abstract provided.
The Last Days Of Social Security Disability: How The Social Security Administration's Policies On The Submission Of Adverse Evidence And Non-Attorney Representation Have Contributed To Its Institutional Failure, Thomas Katsiotas
Buffalo Law Review
No abstract provided.
It's Not Just The Effort That Counts: Conservation Endangerment For At-Risk Species, Robert T. Caccese
It's Not Just The Effort That Counts: Conservation Endangerment For At-Risk Species, Robert T. Caccese
Buffalo Environmental Law Journal
The listing determination factors nestled within Section 4 of the Endangered Species Act can be best described as the controversial heart and soul of the statute. Federal courts, charged with reviewing listing determinations, need specific criteria to provide better consistency and clarityfor the arbitrary and capricious judicial review standard In its current state, the standard has not been stated with any particularity, leaving adequacy to be based upon case-specific analysis by various federal judges regarding listing decisions of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Most crucial are contexts pertaining to conservation effort reliance. Federal agencies' increased reliance on agreements and …
The Lack Of Deference To Medical Opinions In Adjudicating Social Security Disability Claims, Amrita Maharaj
The Lack Of Deference To Medical Opinions In Adjudicating Social Security Disability Claims, Amrita Maharaj
Buffalo Law Review
No abstract provided.
Regulation Of Greenhouse Gases And Other Air Pollutants In The First Obama Administration And Major Air Issues For The Second Term, Patricia Ross Mccubbin
Regulation Of Greenhouse Gases And Other Air Pollutants In The First Obama Administration And Major Air Issues For The Second Term, Patricia Ross Mccubbin
Buffalo Environmental Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Turning Lemons Into Lemonade: Utilizing The Naaqs Provisions Of The Clean Air Act To Comprehensively Address Climate Change, Ari R. Lieberman
Turning Lemons Into Lemonade: Utilizing The Naaqs Provisions Of The Clean Air Act To Comprehensively Address Climate Change, Ari R. Lieberman
Buffalo Environmental Law Journal
No abstract provided.
A Reflection On Erisa Claims Administration And The Exhaustion Requirement, James A. Wooten
A Reflection On Erisa Claims Administration And The Exhaustion Requirement, James A. Wooten
Journal Articles
This essay, prepared in connection with the Drexel Law Review Symposium, ERISA at 40: What Were They Thinking?, examines ERISA’s regime for administering benefit claims and, in particular, the requirement that participants exhaust their plan’s review procedures before filing suit to recover benefits. Like other key elements of ERISA’s claims regime, the exhaustion requirement is a judicial creation that is not articulated in ERISA’s text. Interestingly, former congressional staffers who attended the Symposium said they assumed participants would be required to exhaust plan review procedures but failed to include such a requirement in the legislation. After reviewing the development of …
Multiple Facets Of Damage Caused By Exposure To Low-Dose Radiation And The Legal Remedy, Yi-Chen Su, Peter W.S. Chang
Multiple Facets Of Damage Caused By Exposure To Low-Dose Radiation And The Legal Remedy, Yi-Chen Su, Peter W.S. Chang
Buffalo Environmental Law Journal
In addition to the toll in human life, there are at least three facets of damage caused by the protracted exposure to low-dose radiation: bodily injury, mental anguish, and property injury. After examining cases and compensation schemes in the United States and Taiwan, this article concludes that both the Taiwanese administrative compensation scheme and U.S. federal courts' interpretation of the Price-Anderson Act favor finding injury to the claimants' property, but not adverse effects to their health. To redress the injustice caused by the systemic bias, this article argues that the tort system should be adapted to tolerate gray area, such …
The Erosion Of Federal Common Law: Anticipatory Delegation In American Electric Power Company V. Connecticut, Paul Winters
The Erosion Of Federal Common Law: Anticipatory Delegation In American Electric Power Company V. Connecticut, Paul Winters
Buffalo Environmental Law Journal
Eleven plaintiffs brought a common law action, seeking injunctive relief against the six largest American producers of greenhouse gases. Because the EPA had not yet promulgated regulations governing the production of greenhouse gases, the Second Circuit Court of Appeals held that federal law had not displaced plaintiffs ' common law claim. The Supreme Court reversed, holding that even though regulations had not been promulgated, EPA occupied the field nevertheless. The decision marks an extension of the regulatory displacement of federal common law to regulations that are merely anticipated Such extension, or "anticipatory delegation, " represents an unacceptably large incursion into …
Regulations Of Hydraulic Fracturing Under The Safe Drinking Water Act, Keith B. Hall
Regulations Of Hydraulic Fracturing Under The Safe Drinking Water Act, Keith B. Hall
Buffalo Environmental Law Journal
For more than 20 years after the 1974 enactment of the Safe Drinking Water Act ("SD WA ), the US. Environmental Protection Agency interpreted the SDWA as not applying to hydraulic fracturing. The United States Eleventh Circuit ruled in 1997 that the SDWTA applied to fracturing, but the EPA chose not to consent to that interpretation outside the Eleventh Circuit. Further the EPA continued to take the position that its existing SDWTA regulations did not apply to hydraulic fracturing, and it never promulgated new regulations to cover fracturing. In 2005, the Congress passed legislation that generally is read as applying …
The Social Construction Of Regulation: Lessons From The War Against Command And Control, Timothy F. Malloy
The Social Construction Of Regulation: Lessons From The War Against Command And Control, Timothy F. Malloy
Buffalo Law Review
No abstract provided.
Maximum Feasible Participation Of The Poor: New Governance, New Accountability, And A 21st Century War On The Sources Of Poverty, Tara J. Melish
Maximum Feasible Participation Of The Poor: New Governance, New Accountability, And A 21st Century War On The Sources Of Poverty, Tara J. Melish
Journal Articles
In 1964, President Lyndon B. Johnson called for a Nationwide War on the Sources of Poverty to “strike away the barriers to full participation” in our society. Central to that war was an understanding that given poverty’s complex and multi-layered causes, identifying, implementing, and monitoring solutions to it would require the “maximum feasible participation” of affected communities. Equally central, however, was an understanding that such decentralized problem-solving could not be fully effective without national-level orchestration and support. As such, an Office of Economic Opportunity was established – situated in the Executive Office of the President itself – to support, through …