“Is the Chief Justice a Tax Lawyer?”

Christopher J. Walker
  • Administrative Law
  • Health Law
Pepperdine Law Review
2015

“Reading Law in the Classroom”

Christopher J. Walker
  • Legal Writing and Research
  • Legal History
Green Bag 2d
2014

“Chevron Inside the Regulatory State: An Empirical Assessment”

Christopher J. Walker
  • Administrative Law
  • Labor and Employment Law
Fordham Law Review
2014

“Does the Legal Standard Matter? Empirical Answers to Justice Kennedy’s Questions in Nken v. Holder”

Christopher J. Walker
  • Administrative Law
Ohio State Law Journal Furthermore
2014

“The Death of Tax Court Exceptionalism”

Christopher J. Walker
  • Administrative Law
Minnesota Law Review
2014

“The Ordinary Remand Rule and the Judicial Toolbox for Agency Dialogue”

Christopher J. Walker
  • Constitutional Law
  • Health Law
George Washington Law Review
2014

“How to Win the Deference Lottery”

Christopher J. Walker
  • Administrative Law
Texas Law Review See Also
2013

“Dodd-Frank Regulators, Cost-Benefit Analysis, and Agency Capture”

Christopher J. Walker
  • Corporate and Securities Law
  • Administrative Law
Stanford Law Review Online
2013

“Avoiding Normative Canons in the Review of Administrative Interpretations of Law: A Brand X Doctrine of Constitutional Avoidance”

Christopher J. Walker
  • Constitutional Law
  • Administrative Law
  • Labor and Employment Law
Administrative Law Review
2012

“The End of Administrative Pragmatisim?”

Christopher J. Walker
Loyola University Chicago Law Journal

“The Conservative Case for a Professionalized Civil Service”

Christopher J. Walker
George Washington Law Review

“The Death of Administrative Pragmatism?”

Christopher J. Walker
Loyola University Chicago Law Journal

“Theories of Appellate Review and Stare Decisis in Agency Adjudication”

Christopher J. Walker

“Administrative Law’s Political Dynamics in the States”

Christopher J. Walker
Wisconsin Law Review

“Judicial Hierarchy and Change in Administrative Law”

Christopher J. Walker

“Centering Proportionality in Administrative Law”

Christopher J. Walker
George Washington Law Review

“Article II and the Civil Service”

Christopher J. Walker
Virginia Law Review

“Proportionality in Administrative Law”

Christopher J. Walker
George Washington Law Review

“Preserving Both Agency Expertise and Accountability in the Unitary Executive”

Christopher J. Walker
University of Chicago Legal Forum