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After Deference: Formalizing The Judicial Power For Foreign Relations Law, Deborah Pearlstein
After Deference: Formalizing The Judicial Power For Foreign Relations Law, Deborah Pearlstein
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How much deference should courts afford executive branch interpretations of statutes and treaties? The question that has long engaged foreign relations scholars has found new salience as it has become apparent in recent years that the Supreme Court will neither abstain nor reliably defer to presidential judgment even in cases implicating national security. As the courts grapple with the scope of detention authority granted by Congress’ 2001 Authorization for the Use of Military Force, or the limits on that authority under the Geneva Conventions, a number of scholars have embraced administrative law deference doctrines such as that in Chevron v. …