382 research outputs found

    Judicialization: The Twilight of Administrative Law

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    At its December, 1984 Plenary Session, the Administrative Conference of the United States devoted a part of its agenda to an exchange of ideas on the current state of administrative law and the directions in which this field is likely to move-or be pushed-in the foreseeable future. Perhaps because modern administrative agencies are such a curious admixture of the political, bureaucratic, and judicial components of government, the study of administrative law derives particular benefits from analyses and critiques that emphasize social utility as well as legal precedent. In no other area of the law do the current political agenda and social climate affect so directly both the legal process and its end products. The deliberately provocative essay that follows was written especially for this year\u27s Administrative Law Issue by Loren A. Smith, Chairman of the Administrative Conference. Mr. Smith argues that the current level of judicialization and overproceduralization of the administrative process is a symptom of a fundamental dysfunction. He reminds us that formal methodologies cannot by themselves resolve the difficult issues that inevitably arise in the context of those important social programs placed under the auspices of the administrative agencies and argues that an infatuation with procedural safeguards-the traditional focus of administrative law studies-is counterproductive insofar as it has the effect of diverting attention away from critical substantive problems. Hard looks, Mr. Smith concludes, may be a frustrated body politic\u27s way of avoiding hard choices, and he calls for a renewed recognition of the essentially political-and hence fully accountable-nature of the federal administrative process

    The Morality of Regulation

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    A Vision of the Exchange

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    Introduction

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    Foreword

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    Foreword

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    Life, Liberty & Whose Property?: An Essay on Property Rights

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    This essay explores the place that the concept of property rights occupies in our constitutional system. The word property has been used in a number of ways in the history of our Republic

    Judicialization: The Twilight of Administrative Law

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    Euclid at Threescore Years and Ten: The Twilight of Environmental and Land-Use Regulation?

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    Life, Liberty, and Whose Property lecture given by Loren A. Smith, Chief Judge, United States Court of Federal Claims. Is this the Twilight of Land Use Controls? lecture given by Charles M. Haar, Professor of Law at Harvard University Law. Capture and Counteraction: Self-Help and Environmental Zealots lecture given by James E. Krier, Earl Warren Delano Professor of Law, University of Michigan. Ecology and Aesthetics: Our Future and the Making of Things lecture given by William A. McDonough, Dean and Elson Professor, University of Virginia School of Architecture

    Linking Ecosystem Processes to Sustainable Wetland Management

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    The sustainability of ecosystems has become an explicitly stated goal of many natural resource agencies. Examples of sustainable ecosystem management, however, are uncommon because management goals often focus on specific deliverables rather than the processes that sustain ecosystems
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