Administrative Remedies

By Gwendolyn Savitz and Marc Roark

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Category: Government

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Episodes: 30

Description

Because you can't fix what you don't understand.

The rules governing your daily life - from the medications you take to the air you breathe, from workplace safety to financial regulation - weren't made by Congress. They were made by federal agencies operating under delegated authority. And there's an entire body of law governing how that power works, when it can be challenged, and what happens when it goes wrong.

Administrative Remedies explains that law. Professor Gwendolyn Savitz and Dean Marc Roark of the University of Tulsa College of Law break down the doctrines behind the headlines - Chevron, the major questions doctrine, Jarkesy, due process, agency enforcement - using real-world analogies and current Supreme Court cases.

For law students, practitioners, and anyone who wants the administrative state to actually make sense.

New episodes weekly.


Episode Date
Same Evidence, Different Outcomes: How Credibility and Burden of Proof Decide What Happens in the Hearing Room
Apr 28, 2026
The Lifecycle of an Administrative Case: How the Record Gets Built Before You Walk Into the Room
Apr 21, 2026
Jarkesy Jumps to the FTC
Apr 14, 2026
The Right to a Jury: SEC v. Jarkesy and the Limits of Agency Enforcement
Apr 07, 2026
Mathews Applied: Due Process, Habeas Corpus, and Immigration
Apr 02, 2026
How Much Process Are You Actually Due: The Mathews Balancing Test
Mar 31, 2026
The License You Have vs. The License You Want: Roth, Sindermann, and What Counts as Property for Due Process Purposes
Mar 24, 2026
Before We Take Something Away: Why Due Process Is More Than Getting It Right
Mar 17, 2026
The Judge Who Built Your Case: When the Judge is Also the Investigator
Mar 10, 2026
Not All Judges Are Equal: The Hidden Spectrum of Federal Adjudicators
Mar 03, 2026
Learning Resources v. Trump Part 2 - The Major Questions Doctrine and the Airing of Judicial Grievances
Feb 24, 2026
Learning Resources v. Trump Part 1 - The Actual Holding (No Major Questions Doctrine)
Feb 24, 2026
On the Record or Out of Luck: The Adjudication Spectrum
Feb 17, 2026
Rulemaking and Adjudication - the Two Engines of Agency Power
Feb 10, 2026
Corner Post and the Problem of Regulatory Finality
Jan 20, 2026
Loper Bright and the End of Chevron Deference
Jan 13, 2026
Skidmore Deference: When Agencies Must Persuade
Jan 06, 2026
Chevron and the Fight Over Who Decides
Dec 30, 2025
The Major Questions Doctrine in Practice
Dec 23, 2025
The Major Questions Doctrine Explained
Dec 16, 2025
Trump v. Slaughter at Oral Argument
Dec 09, 2025
Trump v. Slaughter: Background and Stakes
Dec 09, 2025
Who the President Can Remove — and Why It Matters
Dec 02, 2025
Independent vs. Executive Agencies: What’s the Difference?
Nov 25, 2025
How Notice-and-Comment Rulemaking Works
Nov 18, 2025
What Counts as an Intelligible Principle?
Nov 11, 2025
Why the Administrative State Is So Important
Nov 04, 2025
Why Congress Delegates Power to Agencies
Nov 04, 2025
When Delegation Goes Too Far: The Nondelegation Doctrine
Nov 04, 2025
Teaser
Nov 01, 2025