Search for: "Kathryn Watts"
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21 May 2010, 9:47 am
Kathryn A. [read post]
9 May 2013, 10:59 am
Seamon, Andrew Siegel, Joseph Thai, and Kathryn Watts. [read post]
16 Apr 2013, 3:31 pm
Kathryn A. [read post]
13 Dec 2011, 10:39 am
Kathryn A. [read post]
5 Mar 2013, 3:00 am
Kathryn Watts (Washington) has posted Judges and Their Papers (NYU Law Review) on SSRN. [read post]
7 Apr 2014, 10:00 pm
The Ohio State University Moritz College of Law Kathryn Watts (University of Washington School of Law) presents Rulemaking as Legislating – paper is not publicly available [read post]
30 Jun 2016, 2:00 pm
Porter & Kathryn A. [read post]
20 Aug 2012, 8:18 am
Contributors include Richard Epstein, Roger Pilon, Floyd Abrams, Erwin Chemerinsky, Ron Collins, Adam White, Kathryn Watts, and Sanford Rosen. [read post]
10 Jan 2017, 6:52 pm
When Professors Kathryn Watts and Sanne Knudsen announced a new law school course on presidential power for this quarter, the course quickly filled. [read post]
15 Jun 2007, 2:56 pm
Northwestern Law Review's Colloquy has posted Part II of the Essay that I discussed last week by Professors Kathryn Watts and Amy Wildermuth regarding the Supreme Court's recent decision in Massachusetts v. [read post]
16 Aug 2010, 5:40 am
Kathryn Watts One of the “hotter” areas of administrative law scholarship in the last few years has been the empirical study of the role of legal doctrine in judicial review of agency action. [read post]
2 Dec 2016, 11:08 am
As designed by two of our administrative law experts, Sanne Knudsen and Kathryn Watts, the... [read post]
15 Apr 2013, 8:56 am
In "Judges and Their Papers," Kathryn Watts (Washington) makes the case that judicial papers should be construed as public rather than private property. [read post]
28 Nov 2019, 3:30 am
Lisa Manheim and Kathryn A. [read post]
2 Apr 2010, 5:28 pm
Kathryn A. [read post]
31 Jan 2019, 2:23 pm
Now there's a page about Emergency Powers—listing a variety of material from short articles to videos to books—in our Presidential Power guide.A great place to start learning about presidential power is The Limits of Presidential Power: A Citizen's Guide to the Law, by Professors Lisa Manheim and Kathryn Watts. [read post]
20 Feb 2018, 12:07 pm
UW Law's professors Lisa Manheim and Kathryn Watts wrote a book The Limits of Presidential Power: A Citizen's Guide to the Law to provide the answer to these and many other questions you might have, and all in straightforward language. [read post]
12 Feb 2013, 5:22 am
GATES HALL ROOM 138 Register by Feb. 26 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Preliminary Schedule, Subject to Change Welcome Dean Kathryn Watts The Failure of Mandated Disclosure Professor Carl Schneider, University of Michigan Law School Responses to The Failure of Mandated Disclosure Professors Richard Craswell, Stanford University Law School and Ryan Calo, UW School of Law Disclosure:… [read post]
28 Jan 2019, 3:30 am
Kathryn Watts When Congress enacted the Administrative Procedure Act (APA) in 1946, it expected that what we now call Administrative Law Judges (ALJs) would preside over most federal agency evidentiary hearings. [read post]
5 Feb 2020, 3:30 am
Kathryn Watts In 2001, Elena Kagan published Presidential Administration—her now well-known account of presidents’ increasingly aggressive efforts to control agencies’ regulatory decisions. [read post]