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- 1From:PLoS ONE (Vol. 18, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedPresidents and executive branch agencies often have adversarial relationships. Early accounts suggest that these antagonisms may have been deeper and broader under President Trump than under any recent President. Yet...
- 2From:Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy (Vol. 46, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedThank you, Judge McFadden, for your kind introduction. Let me start by thanking the University of Virginia for hosting this event and the organizers for inviting me, and by noting what a privilege it is for me to...
- 3From:Vanderbilt Law Review (Vol. 76, Issue 1)Statutory restrictions on presidential removal of agency leadership enable agencies to act independently from the White House. Yet since 2020, the U.S. Supreme Court has held two times that such restrictions are...
- 4From:Environmental Law Reporter (Vol. 52, Issue 7)SUMMARY Proposed oil and gas pipelines have faced a myriad of legal challenges in the past several years. Even where pipeline proponents have prevailed, the cost and delay of protracted litigation has often caused...
- 5From:Administrative Law Review (Vol. 74, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedThis Article examines the relationship between appointment and presidential removal of "Officers of the United States," which scholars and the Supreme Court generally treat as separate matters. The analysis of the...
- 6From:Environmental Law Reporter (Vol. 52, Issue 6)Recent U.S. presidential administrations have been the apex of what scholars have identified as "the rise of executive-level power, the use of the 'administrative presidency,' and the growing democratic deficit." (1)...
- 7From:Queen's Quarterly (Vol. 128, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedThe happy cartoon figure in the instructions is shown assembling the correct tools for the job and calling the IKEA help line for assistance. Nowhere is he depicted kneeling on the floor at his wits' end, amid scattered...
- 8From:Albany Law Review (Vol. 85, Issue 1)INTRODUCTION "No man can serve two masters: for either he will hate the one, and love the other; or else he will hold to the one, and despise the other."-Matthew 6:24. (1) On January 31, 2018, Brenda Fitzgerald,...
- 9From:Mathematical Problems in Engineering (Vol. 2021) Peer-ReviewedIn the contactless delivery scenario, the self-pickup cabinet is an important terminal delivery device, and face recognition is one of the efficient ways to achieve contactless access express delivery. In order to...
- 10From:Washington University Global Studies Law Review (Vol. 20, Issue 4)This Article presents a comparative study of the appointment process to the Supreme Court in the United States and Argentina. The study reviews the Executive Branch's role, focusing on the selection criteria of potential...
- 11From:Florida Bar Journal (Vol. 95, Issue 2)Florida's public official standing doctrine prohibits members of the executive branch from challenging the constitutionality of legislative action, unless the public official has suffered a personal injury. The doctrine...
- 12From:Vanderbilt Law Review (Vol. 74, Issue 2)In recent decades, presidents of both political parties have asserted increasingly aggressive forms of influence over the administrative state. During this same period, Congress has expanded the role that the federal...
- 13From:Applied Sciences (Vol. 10, Issue 14) Peer-ReviewedThe study investigates the collapse probability of a cabinet facility with a tuned mass damper (TMD) subjected to high- and low-frequency earthquakes. For this aim, a prototype of the cabinet in Korea is utilized for...
- 14From:Administrative Law Review (Vol. 73, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedIntroduction COVID-19 turned 2020 on its head. It caused state governments to implement lockdowns and quarantines, put many businesses out of commission, tanked the global economy, and forced Congress to pass federal...
- 15From:Review of Constitutional Studies (Vol. 25, Issue 2)The primary public health response to COVID-19 has been social and economic lockdowns, which have varied across Canada in scope, timing, and duration. These measures included social distancing, quarantine, masking,...
- 16From:The Contemporary Pacific (Vol. 32, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedAs far as politics was concerned, 2019 was an interesting year that saw three elections, a couple of cabinet reshuffles, and the transfer of a parliamentary seat from one constituency to another. A Council of Ministers...
- 17From:Vanderbilt Law Review (Vol. 73, Issue 2)Eight decades after the Holocaust, many pieces of art stolen from Jewish families still sit in the state-owned museums of former Nazialigned regimes. In an effort to right old wrongs, plaintiffs are bringing suit in the...
- 18From:Faulkner Law Review (Vol. 10, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedJohn McCain appears to have been a sage when, during his failed 2008 presidential campaign, he admonished the nation that "[e]ections have consequences." This statement appears to be accurate as it relates to past and...
- 19From:Public Policy Studies (Vol. 6, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedThe subject of the analysis is the idea of internal trainers in the civil service (government administration offices). I consider an internal trainer as a civil service employee who, beyond his/her own basic scope of...
- 20From:Iowa Law Review (Vol. 104, Issue 1)ABSTRACT: Modern accounts of the national security state tend toward one of two opposing views of bureaucratic tensions within it: At one extreme, the executive branch bureaucracy is a shadowy "deep state, "...