The official account of the Administrative Law Review, a journal edited and published by students @AUWCL in partnership with @ABAesq. Hosts "A Hard Look" series
We are thrilled to announce our Spring Symposium! Join us on Friday, April 18 for discussions about the future of administrative law. Register here: https://t.co/mTHHWSeZe1#!/portal?eventId=5ee5f6f5-02bd-407e-922e-7a4a72940cf5
Excited to be speaking in DC tomorrow at the annual conference of the great @AdLawReview. There might be a last minute change in topic, to: HIGHER EDUCATION AND FEDERAL FUNDS.
https://t.co/v73pb2UW8I
COMING SOON: @AdLawReview’s spring Symposium featuring BG Partner Trent McCotter is coming up on Friday, 4/18. Come hear McCotter discuss judicial deference in a post-Chevron world.
Register to attend or receive the livestream link: https://t.co/DiWyVPplaL
We are thrilled to share the panels for our upcoming symposium on Friday, April 18! Register to attend virtually or in person: https://t.co/izUV2f3M5n#!/portal?eventId=5ee5f6f5-02bd-407e-922e-7a4a72940cf5
Tune in Friday April 18 for @AdLawReview Spring 2025 Symposium, The Future of Administrative Law. Many terrific speakers, incl. Prof. @SusanEDudley for afternoon panel discussion w/ OIRA Administrators from Bush to Trump.
https://t.co/fuGED09hvY
Professor and legal scholar Cary Coglianese from the University of Pennsylvania, joins us to discuss the implications of the Supreme Court’s decision in Loper Bright, the case that overruled the infamous Chevron Doctrine. Listen here: https://t.co/R0KvUBGhPk
NEW: The United States Supreme Court cited the Administrative Law Review in its recent decision, Bondi v. VanDerStok. For more scholarly works on the field of administrative law, visit: https://t.co/VcLxhG8GCN
Given what is happening across government agencies, it seems appropriate to post a new paper by @creelanejones, Thomas Smith, and I called "Testing the Independence Hypothesis," forthcoming 2025 in the @AdLawReview. (https://t.co/ES5QQvyMFN) 1/
My @UMichLaw colleague @danieltdeacon has an important new paper (@AdLawReview) on how #SCOTUS uses agency practice in statutory interpretation. All the more important after Loper Bright: https://t.co/yLfNtKCxJg
Excited to have this op-ed with @creelanejones published in @BLaw about our new research on the effect of removal restrictions on agency behavior, "Testing the Independence Hypothesis," forthcoming in the @AdLawReview later this year (Link to draft below)
https://t.co/ES5QQvyMFN
Thank you Professor @lsolum for the “highly recommended” review of my article Agency Delay and the Courts! It will be published in the @AdLawReview in December 2025. Co-authored with Steve Platt.
We are thrilled to announce our Spring Symposium! Join us on Friday, April 18 for discussions about the future of administrative law. Register here: https://t.co/mTHHWSeZe1#!/portal?eventId=5ee5f6f5-02bd-407e-922e-7a4a72940cf5
In the first article of the latest issue of the Accord, Professors Biber and Farber analyze how proximate cause principles should constrain NEPA review and reject proposed artificial limits on the range of effects an agency must consider.
In our final student piece of this issue, Sarah Madsen evaluates the FTC’s antitrust enforcement authority and asserts that the FTC should revive its dormant competition rulemaking authority to expand the collective bargaining rights of independent contractors.