Abstract

 
 

Citations (2)



 
 

Footnotes (391)



 


 



Administrative Law, Filter Failure, and Information Capture


Wendy E. Wagner


University of Texas - School of Law, The Center for Global Energy, International Arbitration, and Environmental Law

April 2, 2010

Duke Law Journal, Vol. 59, p. 1321, 2010
Energy Center Research Paper No. 07-10

Abstract:     
There are no provisions in administrative law for regulating the flow of information coming into or leaving the system, or for ensuring that regulatory participants can keep up with a rising tide of issues, details, and technicalities. Indeed, a number of doctrinal refinements, originally intended to ensure that executive branch decisions are made in the sunlight, inadvertently create incentives for participants to overwhelm the administrative system with complex information, causing much of the decisionmaking processes to remain, for all practical purposes, in the dark. As these agency decisions become increasingly obscure to all but the most well-informed insiders, administrative accountability is undermined as entire sectors of affected parties find they can no longer afford to participate in this expensive system. Pluralistic oversight, productive judicial review, and opportunities for intelligent agency decisionmaking are all put under significant strain in a system that refuses to manage - and indeed tends to encourage - excessive information. This Article first discusses how parties can capture the regulatory process using information that allows them to control or at least dominate regulatory outcomes (the information capture phenomenon). It then traces the problem back to a series of failures by Congress and the courts to require some filtering of the information flowing through the system (filter failure). Rather than filtering information, the incentives tilt in the opposite direction and encourage participants to err on the side of providing too much rather than too little information. Evidence is then offered to show how this uncontrolled and excessive information is taking a toll on the basic objectives of administrative governance. The Article closes with a series of unconventional but relatively straightforward reforms that offer some hope of bringing information capture under control.

Number of Pages in PDF File: 112

Accepted Paper Series


Download This Paper

Date posted: May 4, 2010 ; Last revised: September 2, 2010

Suggested Citation

Wagner, Wendy E., Administrative Law, Filter Failure, and Information Capture (April 2, 2010). Duke Law Journal, Vol. 59, p. 1321, 2010; Energy Center Research Paper No. 07-10. Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1599252

Contact Information

Wendy E. Wagner (Contact Author)
University of Texas - School of Law, The Center for Global Energy, International Arbitration, and Environmental Law ( email )
Austin, TX
United States

Feedback to SSRN (Beta)


Paper statistics
Abstract Views: 590
Downloads: 79
Download Rank: 157,747
Citations:  2
Footnotes:  391

© 2013 Social Science Electronic Publishing, Inc. All Rights Reserved.  FAQ   Terms of Use   Privacy Policy   Copyright
This page was processed by apollo3 in 0.375 seconds