Jim Rossi
Jim Rossi is the Judge D.L. Lansden Chair in Law at Vanderbilt University Law School, where he specializes in Energy Law and Administrative Law.[1]
Rossi's works address the challenges with the legal framework governing energy transitions in the U.S., including federalism,[2] judicial oversight of energy markets,[3] public utility regulation,[4] and "stranded cost" issues.[5] His 2019 Cornell Law Review article "Energy Exactions" (coauthored with Vanderbilt Law Professor Chris Serkin)[6] received the 2020 Morrison Prize for the most impactful sustainability-related legal academic article published in North America during the previous year.[7] His other works critically address laws governing expansion of the electric transmission grid to integrate new sources of energy, especially renewable power.[8] His writings on energy federalism advocate for clean energy "floors" in the interpretation of federal energy statutes, which would authorize federal agencies to manage interstate energy markets while still allowing a considerable role for state energy supply policies.[9] For example, he has argued that customer net metering credits for residential rooftop solar energy are not capped by federal regulation of wholesale electricity prices under the Federal Power Act.[10]
Rossi also is a recognized administrative law scholar. "Agency Coordination in Shared Regulatory Space" (a 2012 Harvard Law Review article coauthored with Harvard Professor Jody Freeman)[11] inspired a study and policy recommendations on agency coordination adopted in 2012 by the Administrative Conference of the United States.[12] Rossi's 1997 Northwestern University Law Review article "Participation Run Amok" provides a contrarian critique of the growth of mass participation in the administrative state.[13] His other works advance a defense of "reasonableness" review of agency decisions by courts, within a framework of judicial deference to agency policy expertise.[14] His writings devote considerable attention to state constitutions and state administrative law, including legal constraints on state regulation under cooperative federalism programs,[15] "finality" of state and local administrative law judge decisions,[16] and other issues related to state governmental structure.[17]
His books include Regulatory Bargaining and Public Law (Cambridge University Press 2005),[18][19] along with New Frontiers of State Constitutional Law: Dual Enforcement of Norms (Oxford University Press 2010) (with James Gardner) and Energy, Economics and the Environment (Fifth Edition, Foundation Press 2020) (with Joel Eisen, Emily Hammond, David Spence & Hannah Wiseman).[20]
Rossi formerly served as the Harry M. Walborsky Professor at Florida State University College of Law (where he taught from 1995 until 2012), and also has taught as a visiting professor at Harvard Law School (2009) and the University of Texas School of Law (2000–01). He holds an LL.M. from Yale Law School, a J.D. from the University of Iowa, and a B.S. from the Honors College at Arizona State University.
Notes and references[]
- ^ "Jim Rossi appointed to the Judge D.L. Lansden Chair in Law" Vanderbilt University Law School, March 12, 2019
- ^ Jim Rossi. "The Brave New Path of Energy Federalism," 95 TEXAS LAW REVIEW 399 (2016); Jim Rossi & John Wellinghoff, "FERC v. EPSA and Adjacent State Regulation of Customer Energy Resources," 40 HARVARD ENVIRONMENTAL LAW REVIEW FORUM 23 (2016); Jim Rossi, "Antitrust Process and Vertical Deference: Judicial Review of State Regulatory Inaction," 93 IOWA LAW REVIEW 185 (2007); Jim Rossi, "Political Bargaining and Judicial Intervention in Constitutional and Antitrust Federalism," 83 WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY LAW QUARTERLY 521 (2005).
- ^ Jim Rossi, "Moving Public Law Out of the Deference Trap for Regulated Industries," 39 WAKE FOREST LAW REVIEW 617-676 (2005); Jim Rossi, "Lowering the Filed Tariff Shield: Judicial Enforcement for a Deregulatory Era," 56 VANDERBILT LAW REVIEW 1591 (2003); Jim Rossi, "The Electric Power Deregulation Fiasco: Looking Balance Between Markets and the Provision of Public Goods," 100 MICHIGAN LAW REVIEW 1768 (2002).
- ^ Jim Rossi, "The Common Law 'Duty to Serve' and Protection of Consumers in an Age of Competitive Retail Public Utility Restructuring," 51 VANDERBILT LAW REVIEW 1233 (1998)
- ^ Emily Hammond & Jim Rossi, "Stranded Costs and Grid Decarbonization," 82 BROOKLYN LAW REVIEW 645 (2017); Susan Rose-Ackerman & Jim Rossi, "Disentangling Deregulatory Takings," 86 VIRGINIA LAW REVIEW 1435 (2000); Jim Rossi, "The Irony of Deregulatory Takings," 77 TEXAS LAW REVIEW 297 (1998).
- ^ Jim Rossi & Chris Serkin, "Energy Exactions," 104 CORNELL LAW REVIEW 643 (2019)
- ^ "2020 Morrison Prize Announcement"
- ^ Alexandra Klass & Jim Rossi, "Revitalizing Dormant Commerce Clause Review for Interstate Coordination," 100 MINNESOTA LAW REVIEW 129 (2015); Ashley Brown & Jim Rossi, "Siting Transmission Lines in a Changed Milieu: Evolving Notions of the 'Public Interest' in Balancing State and Regional Considerations," 81 UNIVERSITY OF COLORADO LAW REVIEW 705 (2010); Jim Rossi, "The Trojan Horse of Transmission Line Siting Authority," 39 ENVIRONMENTAL LAW 1015 (2009).
- ^ Jim Rossi. "The Brave New Path of Energy Federalism," 95 TEXAS LAW REVIEW 399 (2016); Jim Rossi & John Wellinghoff, "FERC v. EPSA and Adjacent State Regulation of Customer Energy Resources," 40 HARVARD ENVIRONMENTAL LAW REVIEW FORUM 23 (2016); Jim Rossi & Thomas Hutton, "Federal Preemption and Clean Energy Floors," 91 NORTH CAROLINA LAW REVIEW 1282 (2013).
- ^ Jim Rossi, "Federalism and the Net Metering Alternative," 29 ELECTRICITY JOURNAL 13 (Jan.-Feb. 2016).
- ^ Jody Freeman & Jim Rossi, "Agency Coordination in Shared Regulatory Space," 125 HARVARD LAW REVIEW 1131 (2012).
- ^ See ACUS Recommendation 2012-5, 77 FEDERAL REGISTER 47,810 (Aug. 10, 2012), available at https://www.acus.gov/recommendation/improving-coordination-related-agency-responsibilities.
- ^ Jim Rossi, "Participation Run Amok: The Deliberative Costs of Mass Participation in Agency Decisionmaking," 92 NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY LAW REVIEW 173 (1997).
- ^ Jim Rossi, "Bargaining in the Shadow of the Administrative State: Rulemaking Settlement and the Public Interest," 51 DUKE LAW JOURNAL 1015 (2001); Jim Rossi, "Respecting Deference: Conceptualizing Skidmore Within the Architecture of Chevron," 42 WILLIAM & MARY LAW REVIEW 1105 (2001); Redeeming Judicial Review: The Hard Look Doctrine and Federal Regulatory Efforts to Restructure the Electric Utility Industry, 1994 WISCONSIN LAW REVIEW 763-837.; see also Mark Seidenfeld & Jim Rossi, "The False Promise of the 'New' Nondelegation Doctrine," 76 NOTRE DAME LAW REVIEW 1-19 (2000).
- ^ Jim Rossi, "Dynamic Incorporation of Federal Law," 77 OHIO STATE LAW JOURNAL 457 (2016); Jim Rossi, "State Executive Lawmaking in Crisis," 56 DUKE LAW JOURNAL 237 (2006); Jim Rossi, "Dual Constitutions and Constitutional Duels: State Separation of Powers and the Implementation of Federal Programs," 45 WILLIAM & MARY LAW REVIEW 1343 (2005).
- ^ Jim Rossi, "Final, But Often Fallible: Acknowledging the Problems with ALJ Finality," 56 ADMINISTRATIVE LAW REVIEW 53 (2004)
- ^ Jim Rossi, "Overcoming Parochialism: Institutional Design and State Administrative Procedure," 53 ADMINISTRATIVE LAW REVIEW 551 (2001); Jim Rossi, "Separation of Powers and the Lingering Legacy of Antifederalist Separation of Powers Ideals in the States," 52 VANDERBILT LAW REVIEW 1167 (1999).
- ^ http://www.fsu.edu/news/2005/05/27/rossi.book/
- ^ http://www.abanet.org/antitrust/at-source/05/09/Sep05-TomainRev9=27.pdf
- ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2007-06-22. Retrieved 2007-05-05.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
External links[]
- American legal scholars
- Florida State University faculty
- Yale Law School alumni
- Arizona State University alumni
- Harvard University staff
- University of Texas faculty
- Living people
- University of Iowa College of Law alumni
- Vanderbilt University Law School faculty