Minimalism and Experimentalism in the Administrative State

42 Pages Posted: 6 May 2010 Last revised: 4 Nov 2011

See all articles by Charles Sabel

Charles Sabel

Columbia University - Columbia Law School

William H. Simon

Columbia University - Law School; Stanford University - Stanford Law School

Date Written: November 3, 2011

Abstract

Minimalism is our name for the dominant liberal perspective on public policy implementation in contemporary legal scholarship. Minimalism emphasizes public interventions that incorporate market concepts and practices and that centralize and minimize administrative discretion. This essay appraises Minimalism in relation to a competing liberal view of the administrative state. Experimentalism emphasizes interventions in which central government affords broad discretion to local administrative units but measures and assesses their performance in ways designed to induce continuous learning and revision of standards. We fault Minimalist scholarship for ignoring an important reorientation in public policy along Experimentalist lines in the U.S. and elsewhere since the 1990s. We also argue that, in practice, Minimalism is excessively preoccupied with static efficiency norms and price signals and insufficiently attentive to learning and to “weak signals” of risk and opportunity. Experimentalist intervention is a more promising approach in the growing realm of policy areas characterized by uncertainty about both the definition of the relevant problem and its solution.

Keywords: public policy, experimentalism, minimalism, administrative discretion

Suggested Citation

Sabel, Charles Frederick and Simon, William H., Minimalism and Experimentalism in the Administrative State (November 3, 2011). Columbia Public Law Research Paper No. 10-238, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1600898 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.1600898

Charles Frederick Sabel (Contact Author)

Columbia University - Columbia Law School ( email )

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William H. Simon

Columbia University - Law School ( email )

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