Jennifer Nou (@jennifer_nou) 's Twitter Profile
Jennifer Nou

@jennifer_nou

Professor @UChicagoLaw. Administrative law, executive branch, bureaucracy, separation-of-powers.

ID: 1726016648

linkhttp://www.law.uchicago.edu/faculty/nou calendar_today03-09-2013 16:32:33

43 Tweet

2,2K Followers

422 Following

UChicago Law School (@uchicagolaw) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Prof. Jennifer Nou joined this episode of ā€œChecks and Balancesā€ to discuss administrative law rulings from this Supreme Court term (starts at 32:14, requires subscription).

Karen Tani (@kmtani.bsky.social) (@kmtani) 's Twitter Profile Photo

You are about to learn how many Minnesotans have already quietly infiltrated your life and now we are going to be insufferable šŸ™‚

Max Stier (@maxstier) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The White House GSA U.S. Department of Justice 3/7:Ā  The Partnership (@ourpublicservice.bsky.social) encourages the incoming Trump team to focus on three near-term priorities to ensure it is ready to lead the most complex and meaningful organization in the world: 1ļøāƒ£ Engage immediately with the government transition process that exists to help effect an

Jennifer Nou (@jennifer_nou) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Getting ready for argument that Federal Advisory Committee Act is an unconstitutional restriction on president's ability to get advice, esp. from a private committee not funded by Congress OLC op: justice.gov/file/147811-0/… Cross-posting at jennifernou.bsky.social

Jennifer Nou (@jennifer_nou) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Should career staff attorneys at DOJ and beyond stay or leave the Trump administration? Join us on 12/18 for a discussion organized by American Constitution Society. To register: acslaw.org/event/should-i…

Kevin Angell (@kevinangell20) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Given recent news, I’m happy to share a working paper quantifying presidential deviations from enacted budgets from 1958-2018. Analyzing agency/bureau level data on spending and presidential requests, I find that presidents spend less than appropriated when they desire to.

Given recent news, I’m happy to share a working paper quantifying presidential deviations from enacted budgets from 1958-2018. Analyzing agency/bureau level data on spending and presidential requests, I find that presidents spend less than appropriated when they desire to.
Federalist Society (@fedsoc) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Continuing with more discussions on the theme of "Congress: Reviving the Impetuous Vortex," panel 3 of the 2025 Student Symposium highlights Congress and the administrative state, and what we could expect in terms of regulatory reform. Ft. Nicholas Bagley, Emily S. Bremer,

Continuing with more discussions on the theme of "Congress: Reviving the Impetuous Vortex," panel 3 of the 2025 Student Symposium highlights Congress and the administrative state, and what we could expect in terms of regulatory reform. 

Ft. <a href="/nicholas_bagley/">Nicholas Bagley</a>, <a href="/emilysbremer/">Emily S. Bremer</a>,
Jennifer Nou (@jennifer_nou) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Chicago folks: Come ask David Strauss & me anything tomorrow about the President's executive powers! Needless to say, lots to discuss. RSVP here: events.uchicago.edu/event/246256-a…

Alex Mechanick (@apmechan) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The Paperwork Reduction Act is broken. Some say scrap it—but we've tried something like that before, and it backfired. The good news? There's a better solution. In my new paper, I explain how we can fix the PRA. 🧵1/9

The Paperwork Reduction Act is broken. Some say scrap it—but we've tried something like that before, and it backfired. The good news? There's a better solution. In my new paper, I explain how we can fix the PRA. 🧵1/9
UChicago Law School (@uchicagolaw) 's Twitter Profile Photo

ā€œā€˜Regulatory Reform from Nixon to Biden’ … effectively cuts through the partisan chatter of the Beltway to offer clear-eyed lessons about how we got to where we are and what still needs to be done,ā€ writes Prof. Jennifer Nou. buff.ly/0P2kPkK