Contributors

Jennifer Nou

Neubauer Family Assistant Professor of Law

University of Chicago Law School

Jennifer Nou's research and teaching interests are in administrative law, legislation, executive power, legal interpretation, and election law. Prior to joining the faculty, she was a Public Law Fellow at the Law School and also worked as a policy analyst and special assistant at the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs. Jennifer is a graduate of Yale College and Yale Law School, and received an M. Phil in Politics from Oxford University as a Marshall Scholar. After law school, she was a law clerk to Judge Richard Posner of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit and then to Justice Stephen Breyer of the U.S. Supreme Court.

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Policing a Partisan Census

4/22/19  //  In-Depth Analysis

SCOTUS would do well to remember that elections — and the agencies that administer them — require special safeguards

Jennifer Nou

University of Chicago Law School

Census Smoke Signals

3/29/18  //  Commentary

Where there is smoke, there is usually a fire

Jennifer Nou

University of Chicago Law School

Bureaucratic Exit and Loyalty under Trump

1/9/18  //  In-Depth Analysis

Fostering a greater sense of bureaucratic loyalty will help to ensure that when the going gets tough, the tough don’t get going.

Jennifer Nou

University of Chicago Law School

The CBO-CBA Analogy, or What Wonks Could Learn from Each Other

3/17/17  //  In-Depth Analysis

Republican criticism of CBO's report on the American Health Care Act echoes long-standing criticism of cost-benefit analysis at OIRA. There are lessons to be learned here.

Jennifer Nou

University of Chicago Law School