When Federal Agencies Do Not Answer to Courts
Scholar examines how agencies operate independently of courts through rulemaking and legislative drafting.
The Future of Countercyclical Regulation
Scholars evaluate the viability of adjusting regulations to accommodate changes in economic conditions.
The Constitutional Executive Order on Regulatory Budgets
President Trump’s regulation-trimming executive order will likely survive judicial scrutiny despite potential policy objections.
Ordering Agencies to Violate the Law
President Trump’s regulatory budget executive order withholds agency action and harms the American public.
A Debate Over President Trump’s “One-In-Two-Out” Executive Order
Policy experts consider the constitutionality of a cornerstone of the President’s regulatory reform efforts.
The Administrative State Has Run Amok
Recent momentum in favor of regulatory reform is a positive development, and long overdue.
Paralysis by Analysis Is Not Regulatory Reform
Commissioner Mohorovic’s four proposals would impose “paralysis by analysis” on the CPSC.
CPSC Commissioners Debate Regulatory Reform
Consumer safety leaders debate how independent agencies can best improve the rulemaking process.
Assessing the Regulatory Accountability Act
Scholars debate the merits and drawbacks of the recently proposed Regulatory Accountability Act, which would dramatically reform the rulemaking process.
Announcing The Regulatory Review
This publication’s new name and newly designed website constitute a significant step forward, in furtherance of its mission of public service.
The Role of Federal Judges in the Modern Administrative State
Judge Gorsuch’s confirmation hearings offer a key opportunity to examine a judge’s philosophy on the judiciary’s proper role under the Constitution.