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Full-Text Articles in Law

Account Me In: Agencies In Quest Of Accountability, Dorit R. Reiss Dec 2009

Account Me In: Agencies In Quest Of Accountability, Dorit R. Reiss

Dorit R. Reiss

This articles adds to the literature about accountability by examining the little-studied phenomenon of agencies making efforts—sometimes substantial efforts - to be accountable. It briefly describes how three agencies—the EPA, the FDA and especially the IRS—worked to increase their accountability. It demonstrates that agencies are often not the enemy in the “accountability game”. In today’s world agencies, contrary to the stereotype, often buy into the language and practice of accountability. It addresses three arguments for this behavior: a rational choice argument based on comparison of the costs of non-accountability with the benefits of accountability; a power of ideas argument showing …


The Role Of The Council On Competitiveness In Regulatory Review, Robert V. Percival Nov 2009

The Role Of The Council On Competitiveness In Regulatory Review, Robert V. Percival

Robert Percival

No abstract provided.


Interim Report On The Administrative Law, Process And Procedure Project For The 21st Century, Rena I. Steinzor Oct 2009

Interim Report On The Administrative Law, Process And Procedure Project For The 21st Century, Rena I. Steinzor

Rena I. Steinzor

No abstract provided.


The People's Agent: Executive Branch Secrecy And Accountability In An Age Of Terrorism, Sidney A. Shapiro, Rena I. Steinzor Oct 2009

The People's Agent: Executive Branch Secrecy And Accountability In An Age Of Terrorism, Sidney A. Shapiro, Rena I. Steinzor

Rena I. Steinzor

The increase in government secrecy is an important and troubling policy trend. Although the trend predates the 2000 presidential election, the movement towards government secrecy has accelerated dramatically in the Bush Administration. The case for open government is usually based on political principles embraced by the Framers of the U.S. Constitution. This article seeks to bolster these arguments by applying “agency theory” to the question of how much secrecy is too much. While agency theory is most often used to analyze private sector economic relationships, commentators have also applied it to the analysis of methods for holding legislators and Executive …


"Streamlining" The Rule Of Law: How The Department Of Justice Is Undermining Judicial Review Of Agency Action, Shruti Rana May 2009

"Streamlining" The Rule Of Law: How The Department Of Justice Is Undermining Judicial Review Of Agency Action, Shruti Rana

Shruti Rana

Judicial review of administrative decision making is an essential institutional check on agency power. Recently, however, the Department of Justice dramatically revised its regulations in an attempt to insulate its decision making from public and federal court scrutiny. These “streamlining” rules, carried out in the name of national security and immigration reform, have led to a breakdown in the rule of law in our judicial system. While much attention has been focused on the Department of Justice’s recent attempts to shield executive power from the reach of Congress, its efforts to undermine judicial review have so far escaped such scrutiny. …


Technological Due Process, Danielle Citron Apr 2009

Technological Due Process, Danielle Citron

Danielle Keats Citron

Today, computer systems terminate Medicaid benefits, remove voters from the rolls, exclude travelers from flying on commercial airlines, label (and often mislabel) individuals as dead-beat parents, and flag people as possible terrorists from their email and telephone records. But when an automated system rules against an individual, that person often has no way of knowing if a defective algorithm, erroneous facts, or some combination of the two produced the decision. Research showing strong psychological tendencies to defer to automated systems suggests that a hearing officer’s check on computer decisions will have limited value. At the same time, automation impairs participatory …


The New Regulation: From Command To Coordination In The Modern Administrative State, Robert B. Ahdieh Mar 2009

The New Regulation: From Command To Coordination In The Modern Administrative State, Robert B. Ahdieh

Robert B. Ahdieh

Since its earliest days, the administrative state has been rationalized by a particular vision of the world. In the latter, public goods and free-rider problems, collective action and information failures, tragedies of the commons, and negative externalities constitute the “state of nature.” Regulation is the state’s response: command-and-control measures designed to alter the dominant incentives of individuals and institutions to defect from socially optimal equilibria. In environmental law, consumer protection, workplace safety regulation, and other domains of the modern administrative state, this Prisoner’s Dilemma is the motivating tale. To a growing degree, however, the demands of the social and economic …


The New Regulation: From Command To Coordination In The Modern Administrative State, Robert B. Ahdieh Mar 2009

The New Regulation: From Command To Coordination In The Modern Administrative State, Robert B. Ahdieh

Robert B. Ahdieh

Since its earliest days, the administrative state has been rationalized by a particular vision of the world. In the latter, public goods and free-rider problems, collective action and information failures, tragedies of the commons, and negative externalities constitute the “state of nature.” Regulation is the state’s response: command-and-control measures designed to alter the dominant incentives of individuals and institutions to defect from socially optimal equilibria. In environmental law, consumer protection, workplace safety regulation, and other domains of the modern administrative state, this Prisoner’s Dilemma is the motivating tale. To a growing degree, however, the demands of the social and economic …


The New Regulation: From Command To Coordination In The Modern Administrative State, Robert B. Ahdieh Mar 2009

The New Regulation: From Command To Coordination In The Modern Administrative State, Robert B. Ahdieh

Robert B. Ahdieh

Since its earliest days, the administrative state has been rationalized by a particular vision of the world. In the latter, public goods and free-rider problems, collective action and information failures, tragedies of the commons, and negative externalities constitute the “state of nature.” Regulation is the state’s response: command-and-control measures designed to alter the dominant incentives of individuals and institutions to defect from socially optimal equilibria. In environmental law, consumer protection, workplace safety regulation, and other domains of the modern administrative state, this Prisoner’s Dilemma is the motivating tale. To a growing degree, however, the demands of the social and economic …


The New Regulation: From Command To Coordination In The Modern Administrative State, Robert B. Ahdieh Mar 2009

The New Regulation: From Command To Coordination In The Modern Administrative State, Robert B. Ahdieh

Robert B. Ahdieh

Since its earliest days, the administrative state has been rationalized by a particular vision of the world. In the latter, public goods and free-rider problems, collective action and information failures, tragedies of the commons, and negative externalities constitute the “state of nature.” Regulation is the state’s response: command-and-control measures designed to alter the dominant incentives of individuals and institutions to defect from socially optimal equilibria. In environmental law, consumer protection, workplace safety regulation, and other domains of the modern administrative state, this Prisoner’s Dilemma is the motivating tale. To a growing degree, however, the demands of the social and economic …


A Broader View Of The Immigration Adjudication Problem, Jill Family Dec 2008

A Broader View Of The Immigration Adjudication Problem, Jill Family

Jill E. Family

Are too many individuals diverted from civil immigration adjudication? Each year, the government completes millions of diversions from civil immigration adjudication through explicit and implicit waivers, the expedited removal program and the increasing criminalization of immigration law.
By uncovering and analyzing this diversion phenomenon, this article exposes an important piece of the immigration adjudication problem that has been largely undiagnosed. While judges, scholars, government officials and practitioners have acknowledged serious problems within the civil immigration adjudication system, this article widens the view to incorporate the issue of whether too many are being sidetracked from the system altogether.
This article concludes …


Administration Of War, John C. Yoo Dec 2008

Administration Of War, John C. Yoo

John C Yoo

This essay asks whether the Constitution’s implicit grant of the removal power to the President provides control over the administrative agencies by examination of civil-military relations under the administration of President George W. Bush. Control over the military is one of the most significant, but also understudied, aspects of administrative law. The U.S. Armed Services are the nation’s first administrative agencies, predating the Constitution itself. The President has greater freedom to remove and command military officers than over the personnel of any civilian agency. Yet, greater constitutional command over the military agencies has not produced greater presidential control. Since the …


Presidential Control Over The Regulatory Affairs Of Federal Administrative Agencies, Jennifer Allison Dec 2008

Presidential Control Over The Regulatory Affairs Of Federal Administrative Agencies, Jennifer Allison

Jennifer Allison

This paper outlines the historical exertion of presidential control over the regulatory affairs of federal agencies. It first examines the historical understanding of the constitutionality of examining such control. Then, it describes the two main methods that modern Presidents use to exercise such control: presidential directives and presidential regulatory approval regimes. Finally, it discusses how this has manifested itself during the early days of the Obama administration, exploring the regulatory effects of President Obama's executive order that directed agencies to expand funding programs for research using embryonic stem cells.


Ripe Standing Vines And The Jurisprudential Tasting Of Matured Legal Wines – And Law & Bananas: Property And Public Choice In The Permitting Process, Donald J. Kochan Dec 2008

Ripe Standing Vines And The Jurisprudential Tasting Of Matured Legal Wines – And Law & Bananas: Property And Public Choice In The Permitting Process, Donald J. Kochan

Donald J. Kochan

From produce to wine, we only consume things when they are ready. The courts are no different. That concept of “readiness” is how courts address cases and controversies as well. Justiciability doctrines, particularly ripeness, have a particularly important role in takings challenges to permitting decisions. The courts largely hold that a single permit denial does not give them enough information to evaluate whether the denial is in violation of law. As a result of this jurisprudential reality, regulators with discretion have an incentive to use their power to extract rents from those that need their permission. Non-justiciability of permit denials …