Law and Leviathan: Redeeming the Administrative State

Law and Leviathan: Redeeming the Administrative State

Law and Leviathan: Redeeming the Administrative State

Law and Leviathan: Redeeming the Administrative State

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Overview

Winner of the 2021 Scribes Book Award

From two legal luminaries, a highly original framework for restoring confidence in a government bureaucracy increasingly derided as “the deep state.”

Is the modern administrative state illegitimate? Unconstitutional? Unaccountable? Dangerous? Intolerable? American public law has long been riven by a persistent, serious conflict, a kind of low-grade cold war, over these questions.

Cass Sunstein and Adrian Vermeule argue that the administrative state can be redeemed, as long as public officials are constrained by what they call the morality of administrative law. Law and Leviathan elaborates a number of principles that underlie this moral regime. Officials who respect that morality never fail to make rules in the first place. They ensure transparency, so that people are made aware of the rules with which they must comply. They never abuse retroactivity, so that people can rely on current rules, which are not under constant threat of change. They make rules that are understandable and avoid issuing rules that contradict each other.

These principles may seem simple, but they have a great deal of power. Already, without explicit enunciation, they limit the activities of administrative agencies every day. But we can aspire for better. In more robust form, these principles could address many of the concerns that have critics of the administrative state mourning what they see as the demise of the rule of law. The bureaucratic Leviathan may be an inescapable reality of complex modern democracies, but Sunstein and Vermeule show how we can at last make peace between those who accept its necessity and those who yearn for its downfall.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780674247536
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Publication date: 09/15/2020
Pages: 208
Product dimensions: 5.10(w) x 7.60(h) x 0.90(d)

About the Author

Cass R. Sunstein is the Robert Walmsley University Professor at Harvard and the founder and director of the Program on Behavioral Economics and Public Policy at Harvard Law School. He is the author of hundreds of articles and dozens of books, including Impeachment: A Citizen’s Guide, Nudge (with Richard Thaler), Law and Leviathan (with Adrian Vermeule), How to Interpret the Constitution, On Freedom, and Can It Happen Here? Authoritarianism in America. He is a recipient of the Holberg Prize, sometimes described as the equivalent of the Nobel Prize for the humanities and social sciences.

Adrian Vermeule is Ralph S. Tyler, Jr., Professor of Constitutional Law at Harvard Law School. His many books include Law’s Abnegation: From Law’s Empire to the Administrative State (Harvard) and The Constitution of Risk.

Table of Contents

Introduction: "Long-Continued and Hard-Fought Contentions" 1

1 The New Coke 19

2 Law's Morality, 1 Rules and Discretion 38

3 Law's Morality, 2 Consistency and Reliance 63

4 Law's Morality, 3 Limits, Trade-offs, and the Judicial Role 88

5 Surrogate Safeguards in Action 116

Final Words 142

Notes 147

Acknowledgments 171

Index 173

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