Dena Adler and Kate Welty of @nyulaw.bsky.social argue that EPA's repeal of its endangerment finding for vehicle emissions violates the law and will harm Americans. buff.ly/ZUO8jOg
Posts by The Regulatory Review
"State actions in the aftermath of the Mozilla case suggest that even an EPA court victory on disclaiming its jurisdiction to regulate greenhouse gases will not preempt existing state efforts to combat climate change," Harvey L. Reiter, senior counsel at Stinson LLP, argues. buff.ly/3QqKjOQ
Federal-centered diagnoses miss where most governance actually happens, so citizens and policymakers should focus reform on state and local accountability, argue @profschleich.bsky.social of Yale Law School and @nbagley.bsky.social of @umichlaw.bsky.social. www.theregreview.org/2026/04/15/h...
In a recent article, @profschleich.bsky.social of Yale Law School and @nbagley.bsky.social of @umichlaw.bsky.social argue that scholars misdiagnose governance failure by fixating on Washington and call for attention to state and local institutions instead. buff.ly/IR4Og0P
Efforts to curb foreign influence on research may complicate international research partnerships. buff.ly/NzP18L5
In a recent article, Jacob Noti-Victor, a professor at Cardozo School of Law, argues that "hidden AI authorship" is prevalent because financial incentives related to marketability and copyright law discourage content producers from disclosing their use of generative AI technology. buff.ly/0QjvlN3
Research institutions face growing compliance demands as regulators target foreign influence on research. buff.ly/NzP18L5
America’s governance crisis is rooted in weak state and local capacity, so reformers should target state and local elections, procedures, and budgets, argue @profschleich.bsky.social of Yale Law School and @nbagley.bsky.social of @umichlaw.bsky.social. www.theregreview.org/2026/04/15/h...
Regulatory efforts to protect U.S. research from foreign influence may raise tensions between security and collaboration. buff.ly/NzP18L5
"Policymakers and regulators in several regions are moving toward pay your way principles to ensure that large new customers, such as data centers, shoulder appropriate system upgrade costs," Roslyn Layton of Aalborg University argues.
In this week’s Saturday Seminar, scholars examine how a patchwork of BOP policies, limited oversight, and privatized food contracts—combined with demanding Eighth Amendment standards—shape prison nutrition, safety, and dignity. www.theregreview.org/2026/04/11/s...
In an essay in The Regulatory Review, Yonathan Arbel of the University of Alabama and Samuel Becher of Victoria University of Wellington discuss an AI tool that "can address the longstanding problem of consumers failing to read the contracts and privacy policies they agree to."
A recent OECD symposium emphasized the need to balance regulatory protection with burden reduction and simplification. Read more in the final essay of our series, "Regulatory Simplification Around the Globe." www.theregreview.org/2026/04/06/s...
In a recent essay as part of our series "Regulatory Simplification Around the Globe," Veronica Taylor of the Australian National University discusses a new tool that allows public servants to do a regulatory scan to evaluate regulatory burden. www.theregreview.org/2026/04/09/t...
In a recent essay, Sanjeev Sanyal and Aakanksha Arora of India's Economic Advisory Council explain that "greater attention to process reforms have the potential to yield high returns at relatively very low cost." www.theregreview.org/2026/04/08/s...
"Regulatory simplification must be recognized as a strategic priority to ensure economic competitiveness, trust, and social prosperity," Maria Elisabetta Alberti Casellati, Italy's Minister for Institutional Reforms and Regulatory Simplification argues in a recent essay. buff.ly/0zRYlOH
In this week’s Saturday Seminar, scholars debate whether ERISA and related state and federal reforms adequately protect workers from excessive fees, weak oversight, and poor disclosure in employee benefit plans. www.theregreview.org/2026/04/04/s...
In a recent essay, Kostakis Bouzoukas argues that regulators can improve AI governance by requiring organizations to prove how their systems operate in real cases. buff.ly/MwPosyP
“Meaningful AI oversight requires a case-level capability test, not just policies,” Kostakis Bouzoukas maintains in a recent essay. buff.ly/MwPosyP
Kostakis Bouzoukas argues that regulators can improve AI oversight by adopting “proof drills,” which test whether organizations can reconstruct real AI decisions from verifiable records. buff.ly/MwPosyP
"Courts have made it clear that uncertainty does not excuse agencies from estimating economic effects to the best of their ability, suggesting that reasoned decision-making requires additional effort towards quantification," Finn Dobkin of George Washington University argues. buff.ly/zA2UOye
In this week’s Saturday Seminar, scholars debate whether rescheduling marijuana would meaningfully expand medical research, ease burdens on the cannabis industry, and improve public health—or whether broader statutory reform is needed. www.theregreview.org/2026/03/28/s...
Michael King of Charles Sturt University argues that U.S. policymakers should expand financial intelligence units’ access to tax data to combat international tax crime. buff.ly/eXY0ft0
When courts find an agency head was improperly removed, they should grant temporary restraining orders or preliminary injunctions to prevent disruptive leadership “flips” during litigation, some scholars argue. www.theregreview.org/2026/03/26/c...
In a recent essay, Abigail Slater, former Assistant Attorney General of the U.S. Department of Justice Antitrust Division, argues that weak competition in core consumer markets harms households and calls for aggressive, better-targeted antitrust enforcement. www.theregreview.org/2026/03/25/s...
In a recent essay, Michael King of Charles Sturt University contends that despite the OECD’s recent framework for fighting tax crime, gaps in information sharing between U.S. tax and financial authorities persist. buff.ly/eXY0ft0
Michael King, a senior lecturer at Charles Sturt University, argues that legal barriers limit U.S. financial authorities’ efforts to disrupt global tax crimes. buff.ly/eXY0ft0
"Agency officials need to be on their guard against over-reliance on untested and insufficiently thoughtful uses of AI," Professor Cary Coglianese, faculty advisor to The Regulatory Review, argues in a recent essay. www.theregreview.org/2026/03/23/c...
In this week’s Saturday Seminar, experts debate the Trump Administration’s student-loan overhaul, its distributional effects across race, gender, and income, and how best to reform repayment and forgiveness. www.theregreview.org/2026/03/21/s...
Bitcoin has been pushed out of regulated payment rails, so policymakers should build a framework that lets decentralized assets function in payments, argues David Krause of Marquette University. www.theregreview.org/2026/03/18/k...