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Articles 1 - 6 of 6
Full-Text Articles in Rule of Law
Mdl As Public Administration, David L. Noll
Mdl As Public Administration, David L. Noll
Michigan Law Review
From the Deepwater Horizon disaster to the opioid crisis, multidistrict litigation—or simply MDL—has become the preeminent forum for devising solutions to the most difficult problems in the federal courts. MDL works by refusing to follow a regular procedural playbook. Its solutions are case specific, evolving, and ad hoc. This very flexibility, however, provokes charges that MDL violates basic requirements of the rule of law.
At the heart of these charges is the assumption that MDL is simply a larger version of the litigation that takes place every day in federal district courts. But MDL is not just different in scale …
The Conditions Of Discretion: Autonomy, Community, Bureaucracy, Steven F. Cherry
The Conditions Of Discretion: Autonomy, Community, Bureaucracy, Steven F. Cherry
Michigan Law Review
A Review of The Conditions of Discretion: Autonomy, Community, Bureaucracy/em by Joel F. Handler
Industry Influence In Federal Regulatory Agencies, Michigan Law Review
Industry Influence In Federal Regulatory Agencies, Michigan Law Review
Michigan Law Review
A Review of Industry Influence in Federal Regulatory Agencies by Paul J. Quirk
The Executive Department Of Government And The Rule Of Law, Frank E. Cooper
The Executive Department Of Government And The Rule Of Law, Frank E. Cooper
Michigan Law Review
For a long time, people have been talking about the executive department of government and the Rule of Law. Indeed, the suggestion of Aristotle that government should be by law, and not by men, represented a protest directed to the earlier Grecian systems of despotically controlled administrative law. It is my privilege this afternoon to carry forward the discussion of a problem that has been talked about for some two thousand years: how to apply the Rule of Law to the executive agencies of the government. They are commonly called "independent agencies" within the executive branch. I suggest that the …
Leach & Sugg, Jr.: The Administration Of Interstate Compacts, Joseph E. Kallenbach
Leach & Sugg, Jr.: The Administration Of Interstate Compacts, Joseph E. Kallenbach
Michigan Law Review
A Review of The Administration of Interstate Compacts. By Richard H. Leach and Redding S. Sugg, Jr.
Estoppel And Crown Privilege In English Administrative Law, Bernard Schwartz
Estoppel And Crown Privilege In English Administrative Law, Bernard Schwartz
Michigan Law Review
Perhaps the most anachronistic doctrine in Anglo-American public law is that of sovereign immunity. Under it, the State is placed in a privileged position of immunity from the principles of law which are binding upon the ordinary citizen, unless it expressly consents to be bound by such principles. In Anglo-American law the infallibility attributed to the King in the days when he was personally sovereign has been more recently recognized in the State, which the Crown now merely personifies. Thus, even today, and even in the American democracy, the basic principle of public law is that the King can do …