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Volume 63, Issue 4

The Administrative Law Review (ISSN 0001-8368) is published quarterly by the student staff members of the Administrative Law Review at American University Washington College of Law and the Section of Administrative Law and Regulatory Practice of the American Bar Association.

Table of Content
The Complete Issue

ARTICLES

Calibrating Chevron for Preemption
Gregory M. Dickinson

A Cost–Benefit Interpretation of the “Substantially Similar” Hurdle in the Congressional Review Act: Can OSHA Ever Utter the E-Word (Ergonomics) Again?
Adam M. Finkel & Jason W. Sullivan

Fixing the Flaws in the Federal Vaccine Injury Compensation Program
Peter H. Meyers

COMMENT

Setting Labor Policy Prospectively: Rulemaking, Adjudicating, and What the NLRB Can Learn from the NMB’s Representation Election Procedure Rule
Emily Baver

RECENT DEVELOPMENTS

Legal Issues in E-Rulemaking
Bridget C.E. Dooling

A Regulatory Quick Fix for Carcieri v. Salazar: How the Department of Interior Can Invoke an Alternative Source of Existing Statutory Authority to Overcome an Adverse Judgment Under the Chevron Doctrine
Howard L. Highland

ADDRESS

Mr. Justice Marshall Rothstein, Supreme Court of Canada, to the American Bar Association, Section of Administrative Law and Regulatory Practice

Posted in Volume 63

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