Earlier this month, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton filed a lawsuit seeking to enjoin the federal public transportation mask mandate, which remains in place...
Vol. 135 No. 2 I. Introduction Twenty years ago, Justice Elena Kagan published Presidential Administration in the Harvard Law Review. Seventy-five years ago, President Harry Truman signed the...
Vol. 135 No. 2 Modern critics of the administrative state portray agencies as omnipotent behemoths, invested with vast delegated powers and largely unaccountable to the political branches of...
Vol. 135 No. 1 Especially I want to show that it could be different, that it was different, and that there are alternatives. — Natalie Zemon Davis Fifty...
Vol. 135 No. 1 Election Day had barely drawn to a close when then-President Trump began his protests that the election had been “stolen.” He claimed, among other...
Vol. 135 No. 1 Thirty-three years ago, in Morrison v. Olson, the Supreme Court announced a loose, functionalist test for distinguishing between “principal” and “inferior” “Officers of the...
Vol. 135 No. 1 Although “[s]unlight is said to be the best of disinfectants,” too much “sunlight” can be harmful. This tension has long undergirded the Freedom of...