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Articles 1 - 4 of 4
Full-Text Articles in Law
Gray Vs. Powell And The Scope Of Review, Bernard Schwartz
Gray Vs. Powell And The Scope Of Review, Bernard Schwartz
Michigan Law Review
In dissenting from the decision of the Supreme Court in a celebrated administrative-law case, Justice Jackson once declared: "I give up. Now I realize fully what Mark Twain meant when he said, 'The more you explain it, the more I don't understand it.' " It cannot be denied that the learned justice's reaction is one which is often felt by students of Supreme Court jurisprudence. This has been particularly true of the field involved in the case which called forth Justice Jackson's plaint--i.e., that of administrative law. American administrative lawyers have not infrequently had this same response to decisions of …
Antitrust Administration And Enforcement, John T. Chadwell
Antitrust Administration And Enforcement, John T. Chadwell
Michigan Law Review
The importance of the nation's antitrust policy requires that administration and enforcement powers and techniques be equal to the huge task of effectively safeguarding competition. The recommendations of the Attorney General's Committee represent a statesmanlike effort to balance the need for effective enforcement with the need for the preservation of fairness and the conservation of time and resources in antitrust litigation. Some of the recommendations will undoubtedly engender heated controversy; others seem relatively uncontroversial.
Many individual topics are dealt with in the Report of the committee and space does not permit comment upon all of them. The following discussion is …
Administrative Discretion In The Award Of Federal Contracts, Arthur S. Miller
Administrative Discretion In The Award Of Federal Contracts, Arthur S. Miller
Michigan Law Review
For our present purposes, the point to be seen is that while this article is inquiring into the question of choice of contractor, the government is largely in control of the other chief attribute of traditional liberty of contract: the terms and conditions of the contract itself. We may thus summarize a first conclusion in the inquiry under consideration in this manner: the government is under no restraint as to many of the terms and conditions of its contracts and may impose those conditions it deems necessary. These are imposed as a result of a statute (an example of …
White: The Jacksonians, M. Fred Mallender, Ii S.Ed.
White: The Jacksonians, M. Fred Mallender, Ii S.Ed.
Michigan Law Review
A Review of The Jacksonians. By Leonard D. White