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- Title
THE INTELLIGIBLE PRINCIPLE: HOW IT BRIEFLY LIVED, WHY IT DIED, AND WHY IT DESPERATELY NEEDS REVIVAL IN TODAY'S ADMINISTRATIVE STATE.
- Authors
DUNIGAN, MEAGHAN
- Abstract
The article discusses how origins of congressional delegation and the constitutional principles that underlie the nondelegation doctrine in the U.S. Topics discussed include creation of the intelligible principle; breakdown of the intelligible principle, from the growth of administrative agencies; and a intelligible principle standard that recovers the original purpose of the nondelegation doctrine.
- Subjects
UNITED States; SEPARATION of powers; EXECUTIVE-judicial relations; JUDICIAL-legislative relations; JURISDICTION; PUBLIC administration
- Publication
St. John's Law Review, 2017, Vol 91, p247
- ISSN
0036-2905
- Publication type
Article