Wurman's Administrative Law Theory and Fundamentals: An Integrated Approach (Doctrine and Practice Series)
麻豆影音 eBook 鈥 An eBook with the ability to highlight and take notes, plus 12 month access to a digital Learning Library that includes self-assessment quizzes, study aids, an outline starter, and more.
Description
Administrative Law Theory and Fundamentals: An Integrated Approach takes a formalist approach to administrative law while defending more of the administrative state than other formalist accounts. It proposes a theory of administrative power that better explains constitutional text and structure, as well as historical and modern practice. It argues that there are 鈥渆xclusive鈥 powers that only Congress, the President, and the courts can respectively exercise, but also 鈥渘onexclusive鈥 powers that can be exercised by more than one branch. This theory of 鈥渘onexclusive powers鈥 allows students and scholars of administrative law to make more sense of鈥攐r better critiques of鈥攁dministrative concepts such as delegation, quasi-powers, judicial deference, agency adjudications, the chameleon-like quality of government power, and of the separation of powers more broadly.
The casebook also innovates by more extensively discussing (and including in appendices) the 1852 steamboat legislation and the 1887 Interstate Commerce Act; deploying lessons of statutory interpretation as they arise in specific cases; interspersing online assessment questions for each chapter; and by including dedicated 鈥渄ebating鈥 sections that excerpt from the secondary literature on the theory, values, and policy merits of contested doctrines such as deference, unitary executive power, the due process revolution, and universal injunctions. Finally, the book makes numerous organizational improvements, including by placing due process materials after Article III materials and restructuring materials on reviewability.
The casebook also innovates by more extensively discussing (and including in appendices) the 1852 steamboat legislation and the 1887 Interstate Commerce Act; deploying lessons of statutory interpretation as they arise in specific cases; interspersing online assessment questions for each chapter; and by including dedicated 鈥渄ebating鈥 sections that excerpt from the secondary literature on the theory, values, and policy merits of contested doctrines such as deference, unitary executive power, the due process revolution, and universal injunctions. Finally, the book makes numerous organizational improvements, including by placing due process materials after Article III materials and restructuring materials on reviewability.