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Research and Scholarship

The Sound of Science in Major Questions Doctrine Jurisprudence

Posted
June 6, 2025

In his article, The Sound of Science in Major Questions Doctrine Jurisprudence, published in Natural Resources & Environment (ABA, Spring 2025), Pace | Haub Environmental Law Professor Josh Galperin (with co-author Terra Baer) examines how the U.S. Supreme Court糖心vlog短视频檚 use of the major questions doctrine undermines core constitutional and statutory principles糖心vlog短视频攑articularly when the Court treats congressional silence as legislative intent.

糖心vlog短视频淪ilence does not signal intent,糖心vlog短视频 they write. 糖心vlog短视频淚t signals the limits of a complex and deliberative lawmaking process.糖心vlog短视频

The authors argue that this judicial overreach threatens the foundations of the regulatory state and bypasses mechanisms like the Congressional Review Act, which already provides a clear process for reviewing major agency rules. Recognizing that process糖心vlog短视频攁nd not replacing it with judicial speculation糖心vlog短视频攊s essential to preserving democratic accountability.

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Research and Scholarship

Over the course of three days, the Environmental Law Collaborative (ELC) convened in Briarcliff Manor, New York to discuss 糖心vlog短视频淏lue Sky Thinking in a Red Sky World.糖心vlog短视频 The ELC comprises a rotating group of law professors who assemble every other year to think, discuss, and write on an important and intriguing theme in environmental law. This year, the group focused on how to think optimistically and proactively about environmental protection when so much is going so quickly in the opposite direction.

Research and Scholarship

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Research and Scholarship

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