Against Algorithmic Auer Deference
In: Kentucky Law Journal, Band 112, Heft 2
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In: Kentucky Law Journal, Band 112, Heft 2
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In: 75 Baylor Law Review 706
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In: Florida Law Review Forum, Band 74
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In: Yale J. Reg. Notice & Comment Blog
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In: Yale J. Reg. Notice & Comment Blog
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In: Duke Law & Technology Review, Band 19, Heft 139
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In: Harvard Journal of Law and Public Policy, Band 44, Heft 463
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In: Virginia Law Review, Band 102, Heft 101
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The federal government's power to engage in surveillance for national security purposes is extensive. In an effort to reform the current national surveillance regime, scholars have called for, among other things, the creation of a "special advocate" to counter the government's arguments before the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court. Feeling political pressure to improve an ever-unpopular national surveillance regime, lawmakers passed the USA FREEDOM Act ("Freedom Act"). Section 401 of the Freedom Act provides for the creation of an "amicus curiae," a position that differs from earlier conceptions of a "special advocate" in important respects. This Essay examines those differences, and counsels against conflating the Freedom Act's amicus curiae with a true special advocate. By doing so, this Essay highlights the need for continued calls for a special advocate.
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