The APA’s Antidiscrimination Failure
Scholars explain how courts have interpreted the Administrative Procedure Act to overlook racial discrimination.
Improving Participation, Impact, and Fairness in the Administrative State
ACUS issues new recommendations to enhance administrative governance.
Should Regulatory Violations Ever Be Criminal Offenses?
Scholar argues that delegation of criminal authority is less dangerous to the public than critics claim.
Celebrating the 75th Anniversary of the APA
From the New Deal to the present, the Administrative Procedure Act has been the foundation of administrative law.
The Universal Injunction Debate
Can a single judge lawfully prevent the entire government from enforcing a regulation?
Putting the Fizz Back Into Bureaucratic Justice
In a recent book, Cass Sunstein and Adrian Vermeule defend the administrative state against political threats and growing distrust.
EPA, Explain Yourself
Scholar advocates using the Administrative Procedure Act to address EPA’s inter-regulatory contradictions.
The Midnight Regulation to End Regulations
HHS proposes to sunset thousands of regulations, endangering the public and the health care industry.
Will Deregulation in Health Care Become the New Normal?
The Trump Administration’s deregulatory response to COVID-19 is temporary and will not have a lasting impact on U.S. health care.
DACA and the Limits of Good Governance
Administrative law principles led the Supreme Court to deliver a victorious but unsatisfying and uncertain conclusion for migrants.
A Dream Deferred
An uncertain future awaits the federal program designed to benefit children of immigrants.
Explaining the Supreme Court’s DACA Decision
A recent Supreme Court decision maintains protection for people who arrived to the United States as children.