Law School

Administrative Law Part One: Foundations of the Administrative State


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Most students think of administrative law as a chaotic maze of agencies, rules, and Supreme Court cases. But beneath this apparent complexity lies a precise, logical system built on one powerful idea: controlled delegation. If you're preparing for the bar exam or want to master the hidden machinery of modern governance, this episode reveals the core framework to decode the entire administrative state.

Imagine trying to understand how the U.

S. government actually works. From the surface, it looks like Congress passes laws, the President enforces them, and courts interpret the rules. But peel back the layers, and you'll see an intricate web of agencies—EPA, SEC, FDA—acting as a third, unofficial branch of government. They blend legislative, executive, and judicial powers into a single, constitutional gray area. How does this happen without threatening the separation of powers? The answer lies in the evolution of delegated authority — a history stretching back to the founding era, refined through crises like the New Deal, and cemented in the Administrative Procedure Act of 1946.

This episode breaks down the fundamentals: why agencies exist, how they interpret their delegated powers, and the legal boundaries that keep them in check. You'll discover the four main justifications for agency authority—expertise, uniformity, political accountability, and flexibility—and how these justify the inevitable risks of concentration and drift. Most importantly, you'll learn to classify agency actions—are they rulemaking or adjudication?—and how that classification dictates the procedures they must follow and the judicial review they face.

We delve into the APA's detailed "building code" for agency action—notice-and-comment rulemaking, interpretive rules, policy statements, and the critical concept of Chevron deference. Plus, understand the landmark Chenery doctrine, which mandates agencies only justify their actions on the legally relevant grounds at the moment of decision, preventing them from sneaking policy shifts through backdoor adjudications. The six-step exam sequence is your blueprint for cracking complex fact patterns: identify authority, classify action, follow procedures, assess reviewability, determine the standard of review, and apply the facts rigorously. Knowing this will transform your approach from confusion to confidence.

Why should you care? Because the biggest dangers lie in the perceived "fourth branch" myth—agencies wield unchecked power, overriding democratic control. But the truth is, agencies are subordinate entities, created by Congress, bound by law, and reviewable by courts. Recognizing controlled delegation's logic clarifies why this system, despite its flaws, is essential for modern governance. Yet, as AI and algorithms threaten to redefine decision-making, the fundamental questions of transparency, fairness, and legal authority become even more urgent. Will the 1946 APA's procedural protections survive in the age of black box models and machine learning?

This episode is essential for anyone who wants to understand the deep structure of administrative law—not just for passing exams but to grasp the real forces shaping policy and accountability today. Arm yourself with the six-step framework, decode the alphabet soup of agencies, and navigate the future of tech-driven governance with confidence. Whether you're a law student, a future policy-maker, or a concerned citizen, this content equips you to see beyond the map and understand the plumbing beneath our political system.

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Law SchoolBy The Law School of America

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