by NCLA | Oct 23, 2018 | In the News
Philip Hamburger Discusses With The Regulatory Transparency Project Listen Now “We live in a system where regulators make rules, investigate alleged violations of the rules, and then adjudicate those violations before an Administrative Law Judge who is a member of the...
by NCLA | Oct 16, 2018 | Opinion
Written by Mark Chenoweth America has a due process problem. Whether one considers the contentious recent Supreme Court confirmation hearing, Title IX proceedings on college campuses, or federal agency hearings in front of administrative law judges, this country is in...
by NCLA | Oct 15, 2018 | Opinion
Philip Hamburger Maurice & Hilda Friedman Professor of Law, Columbia Law School “Whither Chevron?1 For several years, some justices of the Supreme Court have been questioning Chevron deference, partly on the basis of my constitutional critique of it.2 It was...
by NCLA | Oct 10, 2018 | In the News
A former Cornell University professor who faced a sexual misconduct allegation is suing the university, the U.S. Department of Education and Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos. In the lawsuit, Mukund Vengalatorre, a former assistant professor of physics, claims the...
by NCLA | Oct 5, 2018 | Press Releases
Washington, D.C. — The New Civil Liberties Alliance (NCLA) today filed an amicus curiae brief asking the entire U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit to rehear the recent decision in Americans for Prosperity Foundation v. Becerra concerning the privacy of donors...