Regulation

2
Response
80.1
Tushnet’s Lawless World
Richard A. Epstein
Laurence A. Tisch Professor of Law, New York University School of Law; Peter and Kirsten Bedford Senior Fellow, the Hoover Institution; James Parker Hall Distinguished Service Professor Emeritus of Law and Senior Lecturer, The University of Chicago Law School

My thanks to Peter Horn and Benjamin Margo, NYU Law School Class of 2014 for their excellent research decision on an earlier draft of this Response.

2
Essay
80.1
Screening for Solidarity
Stephen Lee
Assistant Professor of Law, University of California Irvine School of Law

For helpful comments, I am grateful to Jennifer Gordon, Catherine Fisk, David Moore, and Laura Weinrib. This essay benefitted from presentations at UC Irvine School of Law, BYU J. Reuben Clark Law School, and at The University of Chicago’s Immigration Law and Institutional Design Symposium, held at The University of Chicago Law School on June 15 and 16, 2012. The UC Irvine Law School research librarians provided excellent support. I am also grateful to Morgan White-Smith, Taylor Meehan, and the other University of Chicago Law Review editors for their superb editorial work. Please direct comments and questions to slee@law.uci.edu.

2
Essay
84.1
The Unbearable Rightness of Auer
Cass R. Sunstein
Robert Walmsley University Professor, Harvard University
Adrian Vermeule
Ralph S. Tyler Jr Professor of Constitutional Law, Harvard Law School

We are grateful to Ron Levin, John Manning, Arden Rowell, David Strauss, participants at a Harvard Law School faculty workshop, and participants at a University of Chicago symposium for valuable comments, and to Evelyn Blacklock and Maile Yeats-Rowe for superb research assistance. Parts of this Essay significantly expand and revise, while drawing on, a section of a near-contemporaneous, and much longer, article, Cass R. Sunstein and Adrian Vermeule, The New Coke: On the Plural Aims of Administrative Law, 2015 S Ct Rev 41. We are grateful for permission to draw on that section here.