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Administrative Law & Regulation Practice Group

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BriefCase Should The Chevron Doctrine Stand?

Should The Chevron Doctrine Stand?

Chevron v. NRDC (1984) and subsequent precedents held that courts should defer to agency interpretations of ambiguous statutes. This judicial deference to administrative agencies, often called Chevron Deference has been a topic of great debate. Two experts, Mark Chenoweth and Ronald Levin, took on this debate via a variety of mediums -blogs, videos, etc. while additional experts chimed in with Amicus Briefs, culminating in an audience vote on which side convinced them.

Commentary

Deference to Agency Rule Interpretations: Problems of Expanding Constitutionally Questionable Authority in the Administrative State

Deference to Agency Rule Interpretations: Problems of Expanding Constitutionally Questionable Authority in the Administrative State

Federalist Society Review, Volume 19

Note from the Editor: This article argues that, while judicial deference to agency decisions is...

A Shy Frog, the Administrative State, and Judicial Review of Agency Decision-Making: A Preview of Weyerhaeuser v. United States Fish & Wildlife Service

A Shy Frog, the Administrative State, and Judicial Review of Agency Decision-Making: A Preview of Weyerhaeuser v. United States Fish & Wildlife Service

Federalist Society Review, Volume 19

 Note from the Editor:  This article previews one of the first cases of the Supreme...

Party Like It’s 1935?: Gundy v. United States and the Future of the Non-Delegation Doctrine

Party Like It’s 1935?: Gundy v. United States and the Future of the Non-Delegation Doctrine

Federalist Society Review, Volume 19

Note from the Editor: This article discusses Gundy v. United States, a case involving the...