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An Iq Test For Federal Agencies? Judicial Review Of The Information Quality Act Under The Apa, Margaret Pak
An Iq Test For Federal Agencies? Judicial Review Of The Information Quality Act Under The Apa, Margaret Pak
Washington Law Review
The Information Quality Act (IQA) directs the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) to issue guidelines to federal agencies for ensuring and maximizing the quality, objectivity, utility, and integrity of information disseminated by the agencies. The IQA directs agencies to develop administrative mechanisms whereby a person affected by agency-disseminated information may request correction of information that the person believes does not comply with the OMB's guidelines. The IQA is silent on whether judicial review is available to challenge an agency's decision to deny a "request for correction" (RFC). Regulated parties, legislators, scholars, and other groups have framed judicial review of …
Principles Of Non-Arbitrariness: Lawlessness In The Administration Of Welfare, Christine N. Cimini
Principles Of Non-Arbitrariness: Lawlessness In The Administration Of Welfare, Christine N. Cimini
Articles
This article explores whether there exists a concept of non-arbitrariness that imposes limitations on the administration of welfare benefits without rules, regulations, policies or procedures. To address this question, the article examines the concept of non-arbitrariness within various jurisprudential doctrines and the potential applicability of the concept to limit arbitrary governmental action in the welfare context. In each of the areas where courts regulate arbitrary governmental action, underlying judicial concerns give rise to jurisprudential principles. Four principles stand out. First, at a minimum, there must be a rational relationship between the government’s ends and the means it chooses to reach …