Aug 13 2024 Topics Administrative Law & Regulation • Jurisprudence • Litigation • Supreme Court Blog Post After Chevron, a New Birth of Deference for the Administrative State? Jack Fitzhenry, Caleb Sampson For decades, the judicial doctrine called “Chevron deference” dominated American administrative law. In the aftermath...
Jan 29 2021 Topics Administrative Law & Regulation Blog Post Student Blog Initiative Undoing the Trump Legacy, Fast: How Congress Could Use the CRA to Nix Trump-Era Regulations Nicole C. Hager The 2020 election gave Democrats control over the White House and both chambers of Congress...
Dec 13 2021 Video Event Videos Administrative Inquisitions? How Agencies Initiate, Conduct, and Conclude Investigations Tyler S. Clarkson, Aram A. Gavoor, James C. Ho, Richard J. Pierce, Susan C. Rodriguez 2021 National Lawyers Convention The 2021 National Lawyers Convention took place November 11-13, 2021 at the Mayflower Hotel in...
Sep 12 2022 Blog Post News D.C. Circuit Upholds FCC's 5.9 GHz Order Reallocating Spectrum for Unlicensed Use Seth L. Cooper On August 12, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit upheld the Federal...
Aug 26 2024 Topics Administrative Law & Regulation • Corporations, Securities & Antitrust • Labor & Employment Law • Separation of Powers Blog Post Texas District Court Sets Aside FTC's Ban on Non-Compete Agreements Elizabeth K. Dorminey In Ryan LLC v. FTC, decided on August 20, the U.S. District Court for the...
Aug 29 2024 Topics Administrative Law & Regulation • Federal Courts • Labor & Employment Law • Litigation Blog Post In Restaurant Law Center v. DOL, the Fifth Circuit Invalidates DOL Tip Credit Rules Under New Loper Bright Standard Elizabeth K. Dorminey Loper Bright strikes again! In Restaurant Law Center v. DOL, decided August 23, 2024, the...
Sep 18 2024 Publication Federalist Society Review The Curtain Falls on Chevron: Will the Chevron Two-Step Give Way to a Simpler Loper Bright-Line Rule? Ronald A. Cass Federalist Society Review, Volume 25 Traditionally, administrative law cases don’t make news. Instead, they make snooze. They can be exciting...
Topics
After Chevron, a New Birth of Deference for the Administrative State?
For decades, the judicial doctrine called “Chevron deference” dominated American administrative law. In the aftermath...
Topics
Undoing the Trump Legacy, Fast: How Congress Could Use the CRA to Nix Trump-Era Regulations
The 2020 election gave Democrats control over the White House and both chambers of Congress...
Administrative Inquisitions? How Agencies Initiate, Conduct, and Conclude Investigations
Tyler S. Clarkson, Aram A. Gavoor, James C. Ho, Richard J. Pierce, Susan C. Rodriguez
2021 National Lawyers Convention
The 2021 National Lawyers Convention took place November 11-13, 2021 at the Mayflower Hotel in...
D.C. Circuit Upholds FCC's 5.9 GHz Order Reallocating Spectrum for Unlicensed Use
On August 12, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit upheld the Federal...
Topics
Texas District Court Sets Aside FTC's Ban on Non-Compete Agreements
In Ryan LLC v. FTC, decided on August 20, the U.S. District Court for the...
Topics
In Restaurant Law Center v. DOL, the Fifth Circuit Invalidates DOL Tip Credit Rules Under New Loper Bright Standard
Loper Bright strikes again! In Restaurant Law Center v. DOL, decided August 23, 2024, the...
The Curtain Falls on Chevron: Will the Chevron Two-Step Give Way to a Simpler Loper Bright-Line Rule?
Ronald A. Cass
Federalist Society Review, Volume 25
Traditionally, administrative law cases don’t make news. Instead, they make snooze. They can be exciting...