Biden v. Nebraska And Growing Judicial Conversationalism
WILL CHEVRON FALL THIS TERM?
The Supreme Court’s 1984 Chevron decision generally allows administrative agencies leeway when interpreting ambiguous statutes. It has had its critics over the years, including some of the current members of the Supreme Court. The Court typically hears a number of cases each term that implicate Chevron, and this term is no exception. One has drawn attention as a case the Court might use to overrule Chevron.
The Supreme Court, the Second Amendment and Consumer Protection
It turns out that New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. City of New York was not a watershed Second Amendment decision. That much-discussed case concerned a New York City prohibition on the transportation of firearms outside the city. After the Supreme Court agreed to hear the case and before oral argument, state and city laws were changed to permit individuals to transport firearms. These changes in the law rendered moot a case that many observers believed could provide the court an opportunity to expand upon its Second Amendment doctrine in favor of gun rights advocates.
Posts by Author
- Christine Abely 1
- Lawrence Friedman and Victor Hansen 1
- Nicole Noël and Chance Meyer 1
- Allison Dussias 1
- Tigran Eldred 1
- Lawrence Friedman 21
- Judith Greenberg 2
- Victor Hansen 4
- Dina Francesca Haynes 7
- Aliza Hochman 1
- Peter Karol 2
- Lisa Laplante 2
- Sean Lyness 5
- Peter Manus 4
- Chanal McCain 1
- Lynn Muster 1
- James Rooney 2
- Kent Schenkel 1
- David Siegel 1
- Jordan Singer 6
- Monica Teixeira de Sousa 1
- Eliot Tracz 2
- Natasha Varyani 2
- Sidra Vitale 1