Search for: "Jason Webb Yackee"
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11 Apr 2012, 4:00 am
Jason Webb Yackee & Susan Webb Yackee, Administrative Procedures and Bureaucratic Performance: Is Federal Rule-making “Ossified”? [read post]
29 Apr 2009, 2:41 pm
Yackee (Wisconsin) and Susan Webb Yackee (Political Science, Wisconsin-Madison). [read post]
31 May 2012, 6:30 am
by Jason Webb Yackee [Jason Webb Yackee is an Assistant Professor of Law at the University of Wisconsin School of Law.] [read post]
24 Apr 2009, 3:29 pm
YACKEE, University of Wisconsin Law School SUSAN WEBB YACKEE, affiliation not provided to SSRN We provide the first empirical assessment of the ossification thesis, the widely accepted notion that procedural constraints on federal agencies have greatly hindered the [...] [read post]
22 Feb 2016, 4:14 pm
Jason Webb Yackee This short article provides an empirical examination of the link between law school experiential learning opportunities and JD employment outcomes. [read post]
31 Jul 2012, 4:40 pm
Rev. 1371 (2012) [PDF] Jason Webb Yackee & Susan Webb Yackee, Testing the Ossification Thesis: An Empirical Examination of Federal Regulatory Volume and Speed, 1950–1990, 80 Geo. [read post]
30 Apr 2012, 9:45 pm
In a recent article in a leading, peer-reviewed public administration journal, Jason Yackee and Susan Yackee try to measure the ossification of rulemaking, statistically analyzing the time needed to complete all non-routine rules initiated by every federal agency over nearly a two-decade period. [read post]
3 Aug 2009, 11:42 am
by Jason W. [read post]
29 May 2012, 6:00 am
Finally, on Thursday, Jason Webb Yackee (University of Wisconsin School of Law) will discuss his thought-provoking Essay, “Investment Treaties & Investor Corruption: An Emerging Defense for Host States? [read post]
23 Jan 2012, 9:00 pm
A few scholars have questioned the ossification hypothesis in recent years, including Anne Joseph O’Connell and Jason and Susan Webb Yackee, but my forthcoming article in the George Washington University Law Review should end that debate. [read post]
30 May 2023, 4:13 am
A powerful strain of scholarship from Wendy Wagner, William West, Thomas McGarity, Susan Webb Yackee, Jason Yackee, Michael Sant’Ambrogio, Glen Staszewski, and Kim Krawiec, among others, demonstrates that even after President Clinton’s order, actual participation in notice-and-comment remained not merely unbalanced, but unrepresentative. [read post]
6 Dec 2018, 9:30 pm
In a recent article for the Journal of Public Administration Research and Theory, Professor Simon Haeder of West Virginia University and Professor Susan Webb Yackee of the University of Wisconsin-Madison explored “the policy effects of presidentially directed change” during review by the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA) of proposed agency rules. [read post]