Test 2 For Images
At the 17th annual Friedrich A. Von Hayek Lecture on November 16, Steven Menashi, a judge on the US Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, spoke about the impact of Congress’s declining role in administrative policymaking. Menashi argued that the transition to administrative governance has eroded the deliberative process, and discussed ways to reinstate foundational legislative values through a range of reform measures.
At the 17th annual Friedrich A. Von Hayek Lecture on November 16, Steven Menashi, a judge on the US Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, spoke about the impact of Congress’s declining role in administrative policymaking. Menashi argued that the transition to administrative governance has eroded the deliberative process, and discussed ways to reinstate foundational legislative values through a range of reform measures.
At the 17th annual Friedrich A. Von Hayek Lecture on November 16, Steven Menashi, a judge on the US Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, spoke about the impact of Congress’s declining role in administrative policymaking. Menashi argued that the transition to administrative governance has eroded the deliberative process, and discussed ways to reinstate foundational legislative values through a range of reform measures.
At the 17th annual Friedrich A. Von Hayek Lecture on November 16, Steven Menashi, a judge on the US Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, spoke about the impact of Congress’s declining role in administrative policymaking. Menashi argued that the transition to administrative governance has eroded the deliberative process, and discussed ways to reinstate foundational legislative values through a range of reform measures.