Friday, February 5, 2021
Duke Law Journal Hosts Virtual Symposium Today On The Future of Chevron Deference
The Duke Law Journal hosts its annual Administrative Law Symposium today on The Future of Chevron Deference:
Kristin E. Hickman (Minnesota; Google Scholar) & Aaron L. Nielson (BYU), Foreword: The Future of Chevron Deference, 70 Duke L.J. 931 (2021)
- Randy J. Kozel (Notre Dame), Retheorizing Precedent, 70 Duke L.J. 1025 (2021)
- Matthew B Lawrence (Emory), Congress’s Domain: Appropriations, Time, and Chevron, 70 Duke L.J. 1057 (2021)
- Jonathan S. Masur (Chicago; Google Scholar) & Eric A. Posner (Chicago; Google Scholar), Chevronizing Around Cost-Benefit Analysis, 70 Duke L.J. 1109 (2021)
- Thomas W. Merrill (Columbia), Re-Reading Chevron, 70 Duke L.J. 1153 (2021)
- Shoba Sivaprasad Wadhia (Penn State; Google Scholar) & Christopher J. Walker (Ohio State; Google Scholar), The Case Against Chevron Deference in Immigration Adjudication, 70 Duke L.J. 1197 (2021)
- Richard J. Pierce, The Combination of Chevron and Political Polarity Has Awful Effects, 70 Duke L.J. Online 111 (2021)
- Elizabeth Fisher (Oxford) & Sidney Shapiro (Wake Forest), Disagreement About Chevron: Is Administrative Law The “Law of Public Administration”?, 70 Duke L.J. Online 111 (2021)
https://taxprof.typepad.com/taxprof_blog/2021/02/duke-law-journal-hosts-symposium-today-on-the-future-of-chevron-deference.html