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List of scholarly work pertaining to the nondelegation doctrine

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See also: Taxonomy of arguments about the nondelegation doctrine, The Nondelegation Doctrine: A Timeline, and List of court cases relevant to the nondelegation doctrine

Boston University School of Law professor Gary Lawson wrote in a 2001 law review article, "The nondelegation doctrine may be dead as doctrine, but it is very much alive as a subject of academic study."[1]

The nondelegation doctrine is a principle of constitutional and administrative law that holds that legislative bodies cannot delegate their legislative powers to executive agencies or private entities. That means that lawmakers cannot allow others to make laws. This page lists major scholarly works that discuss the nondelegation doctrine.

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Articles about the nondelegation doctrine

The following table features articles about the nondelegation doctrine:

Articles about the nondelegation doctrine
Author(s) Title Source
David Schoenbrod Goal Statutes or Rules Statutes: The Case of the Clean Air Act UCLA Law Review, Vol. 30 (1983)
David Schoenbrod Delegation and Democracy: A Reply to My Critics Symposium - The Phoenix Rises again: The Nondelegation Doctrine from Constitutional and Policy Perspectives: Democracy and Delegation Cardozo Law Review, Vol. 20 (1998)
Cass R. Sunstein Nondelegation Canons John M. Olin Program in Law and Economics Working Paper No. 82 (1999)
John F. Manning The Nondelegation Doctrine as a Canon of Avoidance The Supreme Court Review (2000)
Gary Lawson Delegation and Original Meaning Virginia Law Review, Vol. 88, No. 2 (Apr., 2002)
Eric A. Posner and Adrian Vermeule Interring the Nondelegation Doctrine University of Chicago Law Review, Vol. 69, No. 4 (Autumn, 2002)
Larry Alexander and Saikrishna B. Prakash Reports of the Nondelegation Doctrine’s Death Are Greatly Exaggerated University of Chicago Law Review, Vol. 70, No. 1297 (2003)
David Schoenbrod Politics and the Principle that Elected Legislators Should Make the Law Harvard Journal of Law and Public Policy, Vol. 26 (2003)
Victor B. Flatt The "Benefits" of Non-Delegation: Using the Non-Delegation Doctrine to Bring More Rigor to Benefit-Cost Analysis William & Mary Bill of Rights Journal, Vol. 15, Issue 4 (2007)
Cynthia R. Farina Deconstructing Nondelegation Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy Vol.33, No. 87 (2010)
Dina Mishra An Executive-Power Non-Delegation Doctrine for the Private Administration of Federal Law Vanderbilt Law Review Vol.68, No. 6 (November 2015)
Kathryn Watts Rulemaking as Legislating Georgetown Law Journal Vol. 103, (2015)
Ronald A. Cass Delegation Reconsidered: A Delegation Doctrine for the Modern Administrative State George Mason Legal Studies Research Paper No. LS 16-07 (March 2016)
A.J. Kritkos Resuscitating the Non-Delegation Doctrine: A Compromise and an Experiment Missouri Law Review Volume 82 Issue 2 (Spring 2017)
Keith E. Whittington and Jason Iuliano The Myth of the Nondelegation Doctrine University of Pennsylvania Law Review Vol. 165 (2017)
Keith E. Whittington and Jason Iuliano The Nondelegation Doctrine: Alive and Well Notre Dame Law Review Vol. 93 (2017)
David Schoenbrod How to Salvage Article I: The Crumbling Foundation of Our Republic Harvard Journal of Law and Public Policy Vol. 40 (2017)
Ilan Wurman As-Applied Nondelegation Texas Law Review Vol. 96, Issue 5 (Apr. 2018)
Jennifer Mascott Gundy v. United States: Reflections on the Court and the State of the Nondelegation Doctrine George Mason Law Review, George Mason Legal Studies Research Paper No. LS 18-27 (October 31, 2018)

See also

Footnotes