Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Keyword
-
- Federal agencies (3)
- Regulation (2)
- Arbitrary and capricious (1)
- Authority (1)
- Chevron Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council Inc. (1)
-
- Chevron review (1)
- Computers (1)
- Congress (1)
- Crimes (1)
- Delegation (1)
- Deportations (1)
- Disclosure (1)
- Economics (1)
- Governance (1)
- Immigration and Naturalization Act (1)
- Immigration and Naturalization Service (1)
- Investors (1)
- Noncitizens (1)
- Permanent residents (1)
- Public policy (1)
- Responsibility (1)
- Risk (1)
- Rulemaking (1)
- Securities Act of 1933 (1)
- Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (1)
- Securities and Exchange Commission (1)
- Securities regulation (1)
- Separation of powers (1)
- Statutory interpretation (1)
- Technology (1)
Articles 1 - 5 of 5
Full-Text Articles in Law
Making Rules: An Introduction, Steven Croley
Making Rules: An Introduction, Steven Croley
Michigan Law Review
A Review of Rulemaking: How Government Agencies Write Law and Make Policy by Cornelius M. Kerwin
Risk Regulations And Its Hazards, Stephen F. Williams
Risk Regulations And Its Hazards, Stephen F. Williams
Michigan Law Review
A Review of Breaking the Vicious Circle: Toward Effective Risk Regulation by Stephen Breyer
Power, Responsibility, And Republican Democracy, Marci A. Hamilton
Power, Responsibility, And Republican Democracy, Marci A. Hamilton
Michigan Law Review
A Review of Power Without Responsibility: How Congress Abuses the People Through Delegation by David Schoenbrod
The Single-Scheme Exception To Criminal Deportations And The Case For Chevron's Step Two, David A. Luigs
The Single-Scheme Exception To Criminal Deportations And The Case For Chevron's Step Two, David A. Luigs
Michigan Law Review
This Note applies the two-step Chevron analysis to the single-scheme exception and argues that courts should reject the BIA's single-act test. In applying Chevron, this Note uses the narrow controversy over the proper interpretation of the single-scheme exception as a window on the larger ambiguity that plagues the Supreme Court's Chevron jurisprudence. This Note suggests an answer to a broader issue that has remained unclear under the Supreme Court's precedents: how courts should review agency interpretations at Chevron's second step.
The Obsolescence Of Wall Street: A Contextual Approach To The Evolving Structure Of Federal Securities Regulation, Joel Seligman
The Obsolescence Of Wall Street: A Contextual Approach To The Evolving Structure Of Federal Securities Regulation, Joel Seligman
Michigan Law Review
As a matter of analytical style, this article illustrates a contextualist approach. For a considerable period of time, the dominant analytical style in corporate and securities .law has been a variant of economic, or law and economics, analysis. The virtue of this type of analysis is that it focuses on what its authors deem to be crucial variables and reaches conclusions derived from the core of a specific legal problem. The defect of this type of analysis is that so much is assumed or often assumed away.