- Home
- About Pitt Law
- Admissions
- Academics
- Centers & Institutes
- Career Services
- Resources
- Courses and Curriculum
- Courses & Curriculum Overview
- Catalog of Courses
- First-Year Curriculum
- Pitt Law Academy
- Courses by Requirement
- Departmental Consent
- Required Textbooks by Class
- Schedule of Classes Spring 2025
- Schedule of Intersession Spring 2025
- Schedule of Classes Fall 2024
- Schedule of Classes Spring 2024
- Schedule of Intersession 2024
- Schedule of Classes Fall 2023
- Schedule of Classes Spring 2023
- Schedule of Intersession 2023
- Schedule of Classes Fall 2022
- Courses and Curriculum
- Alumni
Administrative Law
Class Term:
Fall Term 2023-2024
Catalog Number:
5201
Professor(s):
Professor
Lecture
Credits:
3 (3 Contact, 0 Field)
Priority:
General Enrollment Course
Full Year Course:
No
Category:
Standard Courses
Description
Administrative agencies dominate lawmaking today. In theory, governmental agencies simply execute and implement laws; in reality, their reach is much broader. Agencies touch virtually every aspect of modern society. They interpret laws, make and enforce their own rules, conduct investigations, impose penalties, and adjudicate disputes. As more laws delegate power to agencies, agencies gain more power, and their authority—and the limits on that authority—become increasingly important.
In this course, we will focus on federal administrative law and learn the basic principles of administrative law. This includes learning about (1) what agencies do, including without limitation rulemaking, adjudicating, and making policy, (2) where agencies fit into our governmental system and how constitutional considerations and statutory issues affect agencies, and (3) what limits there are to agency power such as those found in judicial review of agency action.