Event Title

Judicialization of Administrative Law: The Trial-Type Hearing and the Changing Status of the Hearing Officer

Presenter Information

Frederick Davis

Location

Duke Law School

Start Date

21-1-1977 11:30 AM

End Date

21-1-1977 12:30 PM

Description

The judicialization of the administrative process, a phenomenon largely taken for granted by both lawyers and the general public in contemporary America, is probably one of the most mysterious, yet significant, features of American government. It is significant because of its increasingly recognized cost and because of the dominant role which it assigns to lawyers. It is mysterious because of the fragile constitutional underpinnings upon which the judicialization was originally based, and because of its remarkable endurance and growth.

Comments

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Related Paper

Frederick Davis, Judicialization of Administrative Law: The Trial-Type Hearing and the Changing Status of the Hearing Officer, 1977 Duke Law Journal 389-408 (1977)

Available at: http://scholarship.law.duke.edu/dlj/vol26/iss2/3


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Jan 21st, 11:30 AM Jan 21st, 12:30 PM

Judicialization of Administrative Law: The Trial-Type Hearing and the Changing Status of the Hearing Officer

Duke Law School

The judicialization of the administrative process, a phenomenon largely taken for granted by both lawyers and the general public in contemporary America, is probably one of the most mysterious, yet significant, features of American government. It is significant because of its increasingly recognized cost and because of the dominant role which it assigns to lawyers. It is mysterious because of the fragile constitutional underpinnings upon which the judicialization was originally based, and because of its remarkable endurance and growth.