Category:Five pillars of the administrative state: a 50-state survey
From Ballotpedia
Pages in category "Five pillars of the administrative state: a 50-state survey"
The following 43 pages are in this category, out of 43 total.
A
- Agency dynamics: A 50-state survey
- Agency dynamics: States that define what qualifies as a guidance document
- Agency dynamics: States that prohibit administrative agencies from making rules in ways that do not follow established rulemaking procedures
- Agency dynamics: States that require administrative agencies to conduct cost-benefit analysis before implementing rules
- Agency dynamics: States that specify qualifications for any (even one) of their administrative agency leaders
- Agency dynamics: States with sunset provisions for administrative rules
E
- Executive control of agencies: A 50-state survey
- Executive control of agencies: Organization of state administrative law judges
- Executive control of agencies: State executive removal power over agency officials
- Executive control of agencies: State hiring or appointment of administrative law judges
- Executive control of agencies: States with elected cabinet members
J
N
- Nondelegation doctrine: Permissible delegations of state legislative power
- Nondelegation doctrine: State formal rulemaking requirements
- Nondelegation doctrine: State limits on delegation of legislative power to agencies
- Nondelegation doctrine: States with APAs or constitutions that contain separation of powers provisions
- Nondelegation doctrine: States with regulatory review bodies
- Nondelegation: A 50-state survey
P
- Procedural rights: A 50-state survey
- Procedural rights: State limits on who can challenge agency adjudication actions in a state court
- Procedural rights: States that allow agencies to impose monetary penalties without a court order
- Procedural rights: States that define final agency action
- Procedural rights: States that establish training requirements or professional qualifications for ALJs, hearing officers, or other agency officials who preside over adjudications
- Procedural rights: States that limit ex parte communications between hearing officers and the parties involved in adjudication
- Procedural rights: States that permit administrative agencies to use informal adjudication procedures
- Procedural rights: States that permit lawyers to represent parties during adjudication proceedings
- Procedural rights: States that place the burden of proof on administrative agencies during adjudication
- Procedural rights: States that provide for administrative agency leader review of initial adjudication decisions by ALJs or hearing officers
- Procedural rights: States that provide for juries to participate in agency adjudication hearings
- Procedural rights: States that require administrative agencies to accept oral evidence during adjudicative hearings
- Procedural rights: States that require administrative agencies to explain the reasons for all material findings and conclusions in adjudication decisions
- Procedural rights: States that require administrative agencies to provide a transcript of adjudicative hearings
- Procedural rights: States that require administrative agencies to share the evidence against regulated parties during adjudication
- Procedural rights: States that require administrative agency officers to base decisions on the adjudication record
- Procedural rights: States that require agencies to follow formal adjudication procedures in administrative hearings
- Procedural rights: States that require agencies to meet higher burdens of proof in proportion to the size of monetary penalties they seek to impose
- Procedural rights: States that require agencies to prove rule violators acted knowingly before imposing penalties
- Procedural rights: States that require agencies to tell people about agency legal authority and what is at issue before a hearing
- Procedural rights: States that require final agency action before parties may appeal to a state court
- Procedural rights: States that require people to exhaust administrative appeals of agency adjudication actions before appealing to state courts
- Procedural rights: States where administrative agencies must allow people to cross-examine witnesses during adjudicative hearings