Event Title
Introduction: The Debate Over Independent Agencies in Light of Empirical Evidence
Location
Duke Law School
Start Date
26-2-1988 8:45 AM
End Date
26-2-1988 9:15 AM
Description
Constitutional theory has rediscovered the problem of governmental structure. As the rights revolution has matured and entered the mainstream, the debate is returning to the question that preoccupied the Founding Fathers: what organization of government is most likely to establish justice, promote the general welfare, provide for the common defense, and secure the blessings of liberty? The overriding contemporary problem is how to treat the administrative state.
Related Paper
Geoffrey P. Miller, Introduction: The Debate Over Independent Agencies in Light of Empirical Evidence, 1988 Duke Law Journal 215-222 (1988)
Available at: http://scholarship.law.duke.edu/dlj/vol37/iss2/1
Introduction: The Debate Over Independent Agencies in Light of Empirical Evidence
Duke Law School
Constitutional theory has rediscovered the problem of governmental structure. As the rights revolution has matured and entered the mainstream, the debate is returning to the question that preoccupied the Founding Fathers: what organization of government is most likely to establish justice, promote the general welfare, provide for the common defense, and secure the blessings of liberty? The overriding contemporary problem is how to treat the administrative state.
Comments
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