The importance of resource allocation in administrative law

成果类型:
Review
署名作者:
Biber, Eric
署名单位:
University of California System; University of California Berkeley
刊物名称:
ADMINISTRATIVE LAW REVIEW
ISSN/ISSBN:
0001-8368
发表日期:
2008
页码:
1-63
关键词:
public choice agency inaction prosecutorial discretion CONGRESSIONAL CONTROL procedure act POLICY POLITICS PARTICIPATION arbitrariness decisions
摘要:
The Supreme Court's landmark decision in Massachusetts v. EPA, requiring the federal government to reconsider its refusal to regulate greenhouse gases as an air pollutant, is the most recent example of judicial review of an agency's decision not to take a regulatory action. Despite the importance of this type of judicial review, it has received little analysis by scholars, and the case law in the field is confused. Accordingly, there are serious questions about the nature and scope of judicial review of agency decisions not to act-with some scholars and leading judges calling for sharp limitations on this type of judicial review to protect individual liberty. This paper examines an alternative set of principles to guide judicial review of agency decisions not to regulate-a trade-off between judicial deference to agency decisions as to how to allocate their resources and judicial enforcement of clear congressional commands to agencies. This framework provides guidance for understanding how and why courts should be intervening in situations where agencies have refused to act. Moreover, the trade-off helps explain both varying levels of judicial deference outside the context of judicial review of agency inaction and why the Court has found some agency decisions reviewable and others unreviewable-including the Court's decision in Massachusetts v. EPA that agency refusals to regulate are reviewable. Finally, when courts strike the proper balance between judicial deference to agency resource allocation and enforcement of clear congressional commands they will be able to counteract public choice failures in the implementation of regulatory programs.