Jonathan Siegel

Jonathan R. Siegel | |
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Basic facts | |
Organization: | George Washington University |
Education: | •Harvard University •Yale Law School |
Jonathan R. Siegel is an American law professor. As of May 2024, Siegel held the titles of Freda H. Alverson Dean's Research Professor and the F. Elwood and Eleanor Davis Research Professor of Law at George Washington University. Prior to joining the George Washington University faculty in 1995, Siegel worked as a member of the appellate staff for the U.S. Department of Justice and as a law clerk for Chief Judge Patricia M. Wald of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit. According to his faculty profile page on the George Washington University website, Siegel's primary areas of interest are civil procedure, federal jurisdiction, administrative law, and intellectual property.[1][2]
Career
Below is a summary of Siegel's education and career:[2]
Academic degrees:
- A.B. (1984), Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts
- J.D. (1989), Yale Law School, New Haven, Connecticut
Professional positions and honors
- Law Clerk, Patricia Wald, D.C. Circuit, 1989-1990
- Attorney, Civil Division, U.S. Department of Justice, 1990-1995
- Staff or member, Administrative Conference of the United States, 2010-Present
- Faculty, George Washington University School of Law, 1995-Present
Academic scholarship
The following table contains a selection of works by Siegel about the administrative state and related issues. Any links in the table below feature Ballotpedia summaries of that scholarly work.
Works related to the administrative state | |||
---|---|---|---|
Title | Source | ||
"Habeas, History, and Hermeneutics" | Arizona Law Review (2022) | ||
"Federal Courts: Cases and Materials" | Wolters Kluwer (2019) | ||
""The Constitutional Case for Chevron Deference" by Jonathan Siegel (2018)" | Vanderbilt Law Review (2018) | ||
"The Legacy of Justice Scalia and His Textualist Ideal" | George Washington Law Review (2017) | ||
"The REINS Act and the Struggle to Control Agency Rulemaking" | New York University Journal of Legislation and Public Policy (2013) | ||
"Textualism and Contextualism in Administrative Law" | Boston University Law Review (1998) |
See also
- Ballotpedia's administrative state coverage
- Administrative State Bibliography
- Scholarly work related to the administrative state
External links
Footnotes