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Articles 1 - 14 of 14
Full-Text Articles in Administrative Law
A Process-Based Approach To Presidential Exit, Mark Seidenfeld
A Process-Based Approach To Presidential Exit, Mark Seidenfeld
Scholarly Publications
No abstract provided.
Legislative Delegations And The Elections Clause, Derek T. Muller
Legislative Delegations And The Elections Clause, Derek T. Muller
Florida State University Law Review
No abstract provided.
Revisiting Congresssional Delegation Of Interpretative Primacy As The Foundation For Chevron Defense, Mark Seidenfeld
Revisiting Congresssional Delegation Of Interpretative Primacy As The Foundation For Chevron Defense, Mark Seidenfeld
Scholarly Publications
Although congressional delegation is the rationale used most often to justify the Chevron doctrine, most scholars who have written about this justification have recognized that it is a fiction, albeit, they claim, a useful one. In “Chevron’s Foundation,” I proposed an alternative foundation for the Chevron doctrine—a judicial self-limitation justification for Chevron deference—based on an implicit understanding of Article III that courts should not resolve cases by making policy choices where alternative means for deciding these cases exists. In this essay, I first revisit my original critique of the delegation rationale and explicitly respond to the arguments …
Presidential Control Across Policymaking Tools, Catherine Y. Kim
Presidential Control Across Policymaking Tools, Catherine Y. Kim
Florida State University Law Review
Over the past quarter century, administrative law scholars have observed the President’s growing control over agency policymaking and the separation-of-powers concerns implicated by such unilateral exercises of power. The paradigmatic form of agency policymaking—notice-and-comment rulemaking—mitigates these concerns by ensuring considerable oversight by the courts, Congress, and the public at large. Agencies, however, typically have at their disposal a variety of policymaking tools with which to implement White House goals, including the issuance of guidance documents and the strategic exercise of enforcement discretion. While commentators have drawn attention to the risk that agencies will circumvent the extensive checks associated with rulemaking …
Standing In The Wake Of Statutes, Mark Seidenfeld, Allie Akre
Standing In The Wake Of Statutes, Mark Seidenfeld, Allie Akre
Scholarly Publications
In Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife, the Supreme Court held that when Congress creates a legal interest to see that the law is followed, the deprivation of that interest, without more, is insufficient to allow a plaintiff to meet Article III’s standing requirements. Lujan created significant uncertainty about Congress’s ability to influence judicial standing inquiries by creating statutory rights, especially in light of Justice Kennedy’s concurrence and the majority’s footnote seven. This Article argues that Kennedy’s concurrence and footnote seven are best explained by recognizing that Congress is institutionally superior to courts in evaluating the gravity of likely harms …
Reasoned Explanation And Irs Adjudication, Steve R. Johnson
Reasoned Explanation And Irs Adjudication, Steve R. Johnson
Scholarly Publications
Under the Administrative Procedure Act (APA), an administrative action can be invalidated as arbitrary and capricious if the agency fails to sufficiently explain the reasons for its choices. This principle applies to agency adjudication as well as to agency rulemaking. How does this principle apply to IRS adjudications? Examining five paradigms of IRS decisionmaking, this Article first establishes that the IRS does engage in APA–style adjudication. The Article then examines tax-specific explanation requirements and asks whether a more robust explanation duty patterned on the APA should be imposed on IRS determinations. Based on a variety of legal and prudential considerations, …
Liberty Of Palate, Samuel R. Wiseman
Liberty Of Palate, Samuel R. Wiseman
Scholarly Publications
As lawmakers concerned with problems as diverse as childhood obesity, animal cruelty, and listeria have increasingly focused their attention on consumers, legal issues surrounding food choice have recently attracted much broader interest. Bans on large sodas in New York City, fast food chains in South Los Angeles, and foie gras in California and Chicago have provoked national controversy, as have federal raids on raw milk sellers. In response, various groups have decried restrictions on their ability to consume the food products of their choice. A few groups have organized around the principle of what we might call liberty of palate, …
An Irs Duty Of Consistency: The Failure Of Common Law Making And A Proposed Statutory Solution, Steve R. Johnson
An Irs Duty Of Consistency: The Failure Of Common Law Making And A Proposed Statutory Solution, Steve R. Johnson
Scholarly Publications
The IRS should endeavor to treat similarly-situated taxpayers similarly, but does this aspiration rise to the level of a judicially enforceable duty? If the IRS takes a position on Taxpayer B that is correct under the law but is inconsistent with a position the IRS took on similarly-situated Taxpayer A, should the IRS’s position on Taxpayer B fail simply because of the inconsistency? These questions implicate important themes, such as fairness, the rule of law, separation of powers, administrative exigencies, the role of common law making in a highly positivistic system, and the sustainability of legal regimes.
A constitutional standard …
The Canon That Tax Penalties Should Be Strictly Construed, Steve R. Johnson
The Canon That Tax Penalties Should Be Strictly Construed, Steve R. Johnson
Scholarly Publications
No abstract provided.
Note, Reasonable Relation Reassessed: The Examination Of Private Documents By Federal Regulatory Agencies, Steve R. Johnson
Note, Reasonable Relation Reassessed: The Examination Of Private Documents By Federal Regulatory Agencies, Steve R. Johnson
Scholarly Publications
In the attempt to bring complex patterns of social and economic interaction under effective public control, Congress has relied increasingly on federal regulatory agencies. These agencies can fulfill their statutory missions only if they possess adequate information to determine both when exercise of their substantive powers would be appropriate and what form that exercise should assume. Without knowledge of the actual conditions prevalent in the areas committed to their supervision, agencies can act only capriciously.
Of necessity, much of the data needed by regulatory agencies must be obtained from the regulated individuals or companies themselves. Although such information often is …
Graham V. Estuary Properties, Inc., 399 So.2d 1374 (Fla. 1981), Anthony E. Diresta
Graham V. Estuary Properties, Inc., 399 So.2d 1374 (Fla. 1981), Anthony E. Diresta
Florida State University Law Review
Environmental Regulation/Constitutional Law-"TAKING" JURISPRUDENCE AND ITS APPLICATION TO REGULATIONS OF SENSITIVE ECOLOGICAL ENVIRONMENTS
Legislative Delegations Of Power And Judicial Review -- Preventing Judicial Impotence, Robert W. Martin, Jr.
Legislative Delegations Of Power And Judicial Review -- Preventing Judicial Impotence, Robert W. Martin, Jr.
Florida State University Law Review
No abstract provided.
Florida's Adherence To The Doctrine Of Nondelegation Of Legislative Power, Carl J. Peckinpaugh, Jr.
Florida's Adherence To The Doctrine Of Nondelegation Of Legislative Power, Carl J. Peckinpaugh, Jr.
Florida State University Law Review
No abstract provided.
Epa And Administrative Inspections, Robert W. Martin, Jr.
Epa And Administrative Inspections, Robert W. Martin, Jr.
Florida State University Law Review
No abstract provided.