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Full-Text Articles in Law
Osha’S Covid-19 Vaccine Mandate: Why Justice Gorsuch’S Analysis Of The Mandate As An Elephant In A Mousehole Misses The Mark, Wyatt Rex Allred
Osha’S Covid-19 Vaccine Mandate: Why Justice Gorsuch’S Analysis Of The Mandate As An Elephant In A Mousehole Misses The Mark, Wyatt Rex Allred
BYU Law Review
Administrative law doctrines such as Chevron seek to strike a balance between adequate delegated power and sufficient checks on such power. The major questions doctrine reinforces the latter. Recent decisions finding major questions, however, have shown a departure from textualist principles, which formed the doctrine s foundation. Justice Gorsuch's opinion in NFIB v. OSHA is an example of this desertion of textualist principles and should thus be viewed as an improper application of the major questions doctrine. Rather than remodeling the major questions doctrine, textualist judges should acknowledge that this form of anti-textual analysis is nothing short of a revival …
Remand Without Vacatur And The Ab Initio Invalidity Of Unlawful Regulations In Administrative Law, John Harrison
Remand Without Vacatur And The Ab Initio Invalidity Of Unlawful Regulations In Administrative Law, John Harrison
BYU Law Review
An important administrative law doctrine developed by the lower federal courts called remand without vacatur rests on a mistaken premise. Courts that embrace the doctrine maintain that when they find that a federal agency regulation is unlawful, they have discretion to remand the regulation without vacating it. The remand gives the regulatory agency an opportunity to correct the flaws that render the regulation unlawful. When a regulation is remanded but not vacated, the courts assume the regulation binds regulated parties despite its illegality. Unlawful regulations, however, are in general void ab initio, just as unconstitutional statutory rules are void ab …
Engineering The Modern Administrative State: Political Accommodation And Legal Strategy In The New Deal Era, Daniel B. Rodriguez, Barry R. Weingast
Engineering The Modern Administrative State: Political Accommodation And Legal Strategy In The New Deal Era, Daniel B. Rodriguez, Barry R. Weingast
BYU Law Review
Administrative constitutionalism in the United States has been characterized by tension and accommodation. The tension reflects the unsettled nature of our constitutional scheme, especially with regard to separation of powers, and also the concern with agency discretion and performance. Still and all, we have accommodated administrative constitutionalism in fundamental ways, through a constitutional jurisprudence that, in the main, accepts broad delegations of regulatory power to the bureaucracy and an administrative law that oversees agency actions under procedural and substantive guidelines. This was not always the case. In this Article , part one of a larger project, we revisit the critical …
Big Agriculture And Harm To Minority Communities: How Administrative Civil Rights Complaints Are The Solution, Morgan Drake
Big Agriculture And Harm To Minority Communities: How Administrative Civil Rights Complaints Are The Solution, Morgan Drake
BYU Law Review
No abstract provided.
Stakeholder Collaboration As An Alternative To Cost-Benefit Analysis, Karen Bradshaw
Stakeholder Collaboration As An Alternative To Cost-Benefit Analysis, Karen Bradshaw
BYU Law Review
This Article compares and contrasts cost-benefit analysis with “collaborative analysis” in agency decision-making. While mathematical models drive cost-benefit analysis, ongoing stakeholder negotiations drive collaborative analysis. Cost-benefit analysis relies on economists inputting numerical values into a model, whereas collaborative analysis relies on the diverse perspectives of groups and individuals affected by an agency’s decision. Administrative law scholars have exhaustively researched cost-benefit analysis while overlooking widespread agency reliance on collaborative analysis. This Article advances the novel observation that legislatures and courts sometimes treat collaborative analysis and cost-benefit analysis as interchangeable.
Administrative law scholars might find it unorthodox, even irresponsible, to equate the …
Enforcement Piggybacking And Multistate Actions, Elysa M. Dishman
Enforcement Piggybacking And Multistate Actions, Elysa M. Dishman
BYU Law Review
Civil enforcement in the United States is uniquely “multienforcer.” Numerous public and private enforcers including federal agencies, state attorneys general (AGs), and private litigants have overlapping authority to enforce myriad federal and state laws. Ideally, enforcers would complement one another’s efforts and use their comparative enforcement advantages to broaden the scope of enforcement and act as a check on underenforcement. But in reality, enforcers are often attracted to the same targets—large, public, deep-pocketed corporations. This means that multiple enforcers may pursue essentially the same enforcement action, arising from the same series of events and against the same target. Redundant enforcement …
The Stock Exchange As Multi-Sided Platform And The Future Of The National Market System, Steven Mcnamara
The Stock Exchange As Multi-Sided Platform And The Future Of The National Market System, Steven Mcnamara
BYU Law Review
Since Regulation National Market System (Regulation NMS) came into force a decade ago, computer technology has transformed the stock markets. While Regulation NMS benefited investors by lowering stated transaction costs, it also created today’s complex and fragmented trading system. An increasing amount of trading now occurs off-exchange in dark pools and other “non-lit” venues, and hidden costs proliferate. In addition to the profits taken by high-frequency traders, these include the defensive costs of the technological arms race, the possibility of another “Flash Crash,” public suspicions of “rigged” stock markets, reduced allocative efficiency, and rising proprietary data fees paid by stockbrokers …
Transparent Review Of Agency Immigration Decisions, Kyler Mccarty
Transparent Review Of Agency Immigration Decisions, Kyler Mccarty
BYU Law Review
No abstract provided.
The Deliberation Paradox And Administrative Law, William R. Sherman
The Deliberation Paradox And Administrative Law, William R. Sherman
BYU Law Review
Deliberation is a linchpin of administrative decision making, and is a key basis for judicial deference to the agency’s interpretation of law. But deliberation has a dual valence in other areas of administrative law: it triggers the right to access agency information in public meeting laws, but bars access in public records laws. This is the first Article to identify and explain what I call the “Deliberation Paradox” in administrative law. This longstanding but unexplored dichotomy has roots in common law history, separation of powers, the purposes of public access statutes, and assumptions about how the government works. But the …
Trans-Substantivity And The Processes Of American Law, David Marcus
Trans-Substantivity And The Processes Of American Law, David Marcus
BYU Law Review
The term “trans-substantive” refers to doctrine that, in form and manner of application, does not vary from one substantive context to the next. Trans-substantivity has long influenced the design of the law of civil procedure, and whether the principle should continue to do so has prompted a lot of debate among scholars. But this focus on civil procedure is too narrow. Doctrines that regulate all the processes of American law, from civil litigation to public administration, often hew to a trans-substantive norm. This Article draws upon administrative law, the doctrine of statutory interpretation, and the law of civil procedure to …
Fcc V. Fox Television Stations And The Role Of Logical Error In Hard Look Review, Samuel G. Brooks
Fcc V. Fox Television Stations And The Role Of Logical Error In Hard Look Review, Samuel G. Brooks
BYU Law Review
No abstract provided.
Checks And Balances On The Fifth Branch Of Government: Colorado Environmental Coalition V. Wenker And The Justiciability Of The Federal Advisory Committee Act, Joshua W. Abbott
Checks And Balances On The Fifth Branch Of Government: Colorado Environmental Coalition V. Wenker And The Justiciability Of The Federal Advisory Committee Act, Joshua W. Abbott
BYU Law Review
No abstract provided.
The Weak Nondelegation Doctrine And American Trucking Associations V. Epa, Gabriel Clark
The Weak Nondelegation Doctrine And American Trucking Associations V. Epa, Gabriel Clark
BYU Law Review
No abstract provided.
The Changing Relationship Of The Judiciary To The Policy And Administrative Processes Of Governments: An Overview Of Recent Commentary On The Nature, Causes, Consequences, And Proposals For Reform Of Contemporary Judicial Encroachment, Stephen L. Fluckiger
BYU Law Review
No abstract provided.
The Preemptive Effect Of Osha's Hazard Communication Standard Outside The Manufacturing Sector, Toby A. Threet
The Preemptive Effect Of Osha's Hazard Communication Standard Outside The Manufacturing Sector, Toby A. Threet
BYU Law Review
No abstract provided.
Judge Wilkey's Contributions To Administrative Law And The Law Of Separation Of Powers, Steven S. Rosenthal
Judge Wilkey's Contributions To Administrative Law And The Law Of Separation Of Powers, Steven S. Rosenthal
BYU Law Review
No abstract provided.
Victim Reparation Programs: Learning From Experience, Byron L. Beck
Victim Reparation Programs: Learning From Experience, Byron L. Beck
BYU Law Review
No abstract provided.
Agency Discretion To Accept Comment In Informal Rulemaking: What Constitutes "Good Cause" Under The Administrative Procedure Act?, Layne M. Campbell
Agency Discretion To Accept Comment In Informal Rulemaking: What Constitutes "Good Cause" Under The Administrative Procedure Act?, Layne M. Campbell
BYU Law Review
No abstract provided.
Antitrust: Shared Information Between The Ftc And The Department Of Justice, Judy Beckner Sloan
Antitrust: Shared Information Between The Ftc And The Department Of Justice, Judy Beckner Sloan
BYU Law Review
No abstract provided.
Regulation Of Uninsured Multiple-Employer Trusts Under Erisa: An Open Question Again?, John A. Adams
Regulation Of Uninsured Multiple-Employer Trusts Under Erisa: An Open Question Again?, John A. Adams
BYU Law Review
No abstract provided.
Tucker Act Jurisdiction Over Breach Of Trust Claims, Gregory K. Orme
Tucker Act Jurisdiction Over Breach Of Trust Claims, Gregory K. Orme
BYU Law Review
No abstract provided.
Illegal Acts And The Discretionary Function Exception Of The Federal Tort Claims Act
Illegal Acts And The Discretionary Function Exception Of The Federal Tort Claims Act
BYU Law Review
No abstract provided.
What Is A Record? Two Approaches To The Freedom Of Information Act's Threshold Requirement
What Is A Record? Two Approaches To The Freedom Of Information Act's Threshold Requirement
BYU Law Review
No abstract provided.
Administrative Law-Government Contracts-Public Utilities Supplying Services To Government Agencies Are Government Contractors Subject To Nondiscrimination Provisions Of Executive Order 11,246-United States V. New Orleans Public Service. Inc.
BYU Law Review
No abstract provided.
Administrative Law - Freedom Of Information Acti: Exemption 5 - Information Concerning Grounds For Some Renegotiation Board Decisions Made Unavailable - Renegotiation Board V. Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corp.
BYU Law Review
No abstract provided.