Gillian Metzger
đ€ PersonAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
It was one of the first in this line of cases looking historically and traces out all of the ways in which we had a robust and developing administrative state in the first 100 years after the Constitution was adopted. And it's a great read. It's a classic. Yep. The second is another book in the historical vein. It's by Dan Carpenter, and it's called The Forging of Bureaucratic Autonomy.
It was one of the first in this line of cases looking historically and traces out all of the ways in which we had a robust and developing administrative state in the first 100 years after the Constitution was adopted. And it's a great read. It's a classic. Yep. The second is another book in the historical vein. It's by Dan Carpenter, and it's called The Forging of Bureaucratic Autonomy.
And it looks in the progressive era when a lot of the agencies that we now take for granted were developed and developed their independence and expertise. And particularly in this period where we have a war on the deep state and a war on administrative expertise, it's really worth reading that account again.
And it looks in the progressive era when a lot of the agencies that we now take for granted were developed and developed their independence and expertise. And particularly in this period where we have a war on the deep state and a war on administrative expertise, it's really worth reading that account again.
the efforts that were undertaken to forge a sense of autonomy for administrative government and what the reasons were and why people thought that was so important and valuable. The third is actually not a book. It's 99 pages, so I think it kind of counts, but it's an article by Karantani, and it's the foreword to
the efforts that were undertaken to forge a sense of autonomy for administrative government and what the reasons were and why people thought that was so important and valuable. The third is actually not a book. It's 99 pages, so I think it kind of counts, but it's an article by Karantani, and it's the foreword to
the Harvard Law Review's Supreme Court issue, which comes out in November, and it's called Creation, Narration, and Erasure, Power and Possibility at the United States Supreme Court.
the Harvard Law Review's Supreme Court issue, which comes out in November, and it's called Creation, Narration, and Erasure, Power and Possibility at the United States Supreme Court.
And it is just a wonderful account of the narratives that the Supreme Court is telling us, what counter-narratives we could find, and what the narratives the court is telling us tell us about the court and about ourselves.
And it is just a wonderful account of the narratives that the Supreme Court is telling us, what counter-narratives we could find, and what the narratives the court is telling us tell us about the court and about ourselves.