Inside the Equal Access to Justice ACT
Autor Lowell E. Baieren Limba Engleză Hardback – 18 dec 2015
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781442257443
ISBN-10: 144225744X
Pagini: 678
Ilustrații: 59 black & white illustrations, 13 charts, 6 graphs
Dimensiuni: 152 x 231 x 58 mm
Greutate: 1.18 kg
Editura: Rowman & Littlefield
ISBN-10: 144225744X
Pagini: 678
Ilustrații: 59 black & white illustrations, 13 charts, 6 graphs
Dimensiuni: 152 x 231 x 58 mm
Greutate: 1.18 kg
Editura: Rowman & Littlefield
Notă biografică
Cuprins
Table of Contents
Title Page
List of Illustrations
Prologue: Environmental Litigation and Its Consequences
Author¿s Acknowledgments
Chapter 1: The Growth of Government Regulation in the United States
The New Deal and the Foundation of the Administrative State
The Administrative Procedure Act and Control Over Agencies
Expanding Entitlements
The Great Society: Kennedy and Johnson
The Era of Public Interest Law: Civil Rights, Consumerism and Environmentalism
Environmental Litigation and Broadening the Waiver of Sovereign Immunity
Chapter 2: The Development of the Equal Access to Justice Act
Early EAJA Proposals: Expanding the Public Interest Mandate
Narrowing and Focusing the Legislation: Responding to a Devastating Economic Crisis and Bureaucratic Blitzkrieg
EAJA: The Evolution of a Unique Small Business Bill
The 1980 Presidential Election and the Reagan Revolution
Wisconsin¿s 1980 2nd District Congressional Election Campaign: A Microcosm of the Presidential Election
The Voice of the Silent Majority: Americäs Small Business Community Resonates Through the Presidential Election Campaign
1980 EAJA Hearings and Chairman Kastenmeier¿s Dilemma
The September 3-4, 1980 Mark-Up of EAJA S. 265: Resurrection of a Pariah, the 501(c)(3) Financial Exemption
Paranoia in the Capitol: EAJA¿s Enactment Becomes Politically Pragmatic
Chapter 3: Use and Amendment of the Equal Access to Justice Act from 1981 to 1985
EAJA 101: How It Works
Moving EAJA from Temporary Legislation to Permanent Legislation
The Financial Exemption for 501(c)(3) Organizations
President Regan¿s Rejection of EAJA¿s Reauthorization
Chapter 4: Success and Expansion of the Equal Access to Justice Act After 1985
Expanding EAJA¿s Coverage and Reporting EAJA¿s Successes
Imitating EAJA
Successful Users of EAJA Small Businesses Veterans Social Security Beneficiaries Native Peoples Immigrants Exceptions: Cases Where EAJA Does Not Apply Regulatory Shifts in the 1980¿s and 1990¿s Further Amendments to EAJA
Chapter 5: The Universe of the Eco-Crusaders The Constellation of Environmental Advocates The First Generation: 1886 ¿ 1936 The Second Generation: 1947 ¿ 1970 The Third Generation: 1970 ¿ 2000 Anthropocentric Versus Biocentric Man, and Deep Ecology The Secret World of Animal Rights
Chapter 6: Barbarians at the Gate: Saints and Sinners Profiles of the Third Generation¿s Eco-Warriors: 1970 ¿ 2000 Environmental Public Interest Law Firms Conclusion to a Century of Change
Chapter 7: The Environmental Litigation Crisis The Endangered Species Act: A License to Sue The Cost of Endangered Species Megafauna to Megalitigation: Multidistrict Litigation The MDL: Courtroom Access for Special Interests A Temporary Reprieve: How the MDL will Beget More Lawsuits
An Answer to Litigation-Driven Species Management: Cooperative Conservation
Chapter 8: Cooperative Conservation: Preempting Listings and Building Trust
The Future Challenge: An Exercise in Trust The Dunes Sagebrush Lizard The Lesser Prairie Chicken The Greater Sage Grouse Cooperative Conservation and Greater Sage Grouse Cooperative Conservation: An Endangered Future?
Chapter 9: Abuses of the Equal Access to Justice Act: Endangered Species and Beyond Armageddon: Litigating Solely to Delay Federal Agency Action Of Wolves and Men: Using Litigation to Delay Delisting EAJA and Endangered Species: Statutory Limitations on Attorneys¿ Fees Provisions 501(c)(3)s and the Equal Access to Justice Act: America Foots the Bill Evading Pierce: The Inflation of EAJA Fees The Prevalence of Settlements The Sue and Settle Gambit: A New Phenomenon Rulemaking by the Courts and Environmentalists The Cost of EAJA
Chapter 10: Reforming the Equal Access to Justice Act Recent Scrutiny of EAJA Congressional Scrutiny of EAJA Recommendations for Future EAJA Reform 1. Restore reporting provisions 2. Ensure the award of reasonable attorneys¿ fees 3. Make judicial intervention mandatory 4. Strengthen eligibility requirements 5. Fees awards under EAJA should be limited to $200,000 in any single case
6. Each prevailing party should be limited to a total of three EAJA awards in any given year
7. Parties should be statutorily barred from collecting multiple EAJA awards for the same work
8. EAJA fees should be reduced in cases where parties utilize staff attorneys rather than outside counsel 9. EAJA fees should be paid from agency budgets, not the Judgment Fund 10. End no-fault litigation: Reverse fee shifting should be available under EAJA A Time for Action
Epilogue: A New Beginning?
Bibliography
Appendix A: The Equal Access to Justice Act
Appendix A(1): The Equal Access to Justice Act After Passage in 1980 Appendix A(2): The Equal Access to Justice Act After Reauthorization in 1985
Appendix A(3): The Equal Access to Justice Act Today
Appendix B: EAJA Payments by the Department of Veterans Affairs, 2003-2012
Appendix C: EAJA Payments by the Social Security Administration, 2004-2012
Appendix D: Model Bill for Reform of the Equal Access to Justice Act
Appendix E: Acronyms
Bibliography
Author Biography