This expanded treatment of the subject covers topics including recent constitutional developments related to federal agency adjudication, the wide word of ‘informal’ adjudication conducted outside the APA, the internal management and external oversight of adjudication programs, and developments in the use of technology to support and manage adjudication. While government and private counsel engaged in administrative adjudication under the APA will still find this Guide practically useful, its focus on questions of institutional design will prove invaluable for an expanded audience of executive- and legislative-branch policy makers, federal judges, academic researchers, nongovernmental organizations, advocates, and others involved with federal administrative agencies.
Sobre o autor
Jeremy S. Graboyes is the Research Director for the Administrative Conference of the United States. In that role, he oversees a team of attorneys who facilitate the work of the ACUS Assembly, support implementation of recommendations adopted by the ACUS Assembly, and manage a large portfolio of public forums, interagency roundtables, working groups, studies, and other initiatives. Mr. Graboyes has also written several reports for ACUS on the topic of federal agency adjudication.Mr. Graboyes is a member of the Council of the American Bar Association’s Administrative Law and Regulatory Practice Section and Vice Chair of the Section’s Adjudication Committee. He is also the editor of the Section’s recently published Guide to Federal Agency Adjudication (3rd Edition).Before joining ACUS, Mr. Graboyes worked as an Attorney Advisor for the Social Security Administration’s Appeals Council. Mr. Graboyes advised officials on matters related to adjudication, rulemaking, policy development, technology, and training.Mr. Graboyes earned his J.D., magna cum laude, from George Mason University School of Law, where he was a member of the George Mason Law Review. He holds a B.A. in Linguistics from the University of Virginia.