Emily S. Bremer is a law teaching candidate in the AALS Faculty Appointments Register.
A graduate of New York University School of Law, Ms. Bremer currently serves as an Attorney Advisor to the Administrative Conference of the United States (ACUS). Prior to entering government service, she was an associate in the telecommunications and appellate litigation group at Wiley Rein LLP in Washington, DC.
Ms. Bremer clerked for Hon. Andrew J. Kleinfeld on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. She was the Executive Notes Editor for the NYU Journal of Law & Liberty and a student editor for the International Journal of Constitutional Law. She received her undergraduate degree in Politics with honors from New York University.
Quick access to Ms. Bremer’s CV, research agenda, scholarship, and a video clip of a representative public presentation is available below. More detailed information about these materials is available via the navigation tabs above.
Key Documents
Scholarship
- The Unwritten Administrative Constitution, 65 Florida Law Review (forthcoming 2014).
- Clearing the Path to Justice: Reform of 28 U.S.C. § 1500, 65 Alabama Law Review (forthcoming 2013) (with Jonathan R. Siegel).
- Incorporation by Reference in an Open-Government Age, 36 Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy 131 (2013).
- The Dynamic Last-in-Time Rule, 22 Indiana International & Comparative Law Review 27 (2012).
- Loan Repayment Assistance Programs, in Access to Civil Justice for Working Americans of Average Means (Samuel Estreicher and Joy Radice, eds.) (in progress).
Other Publications
- Technical Standards Meet Administrative Law: A Primer on an Ongoing Debate, 65 Standards Engineering, Mar./Apr. 2013, at 1.
- Standards, Regulations and Incorporation by Reference: An Interview with Emily Bremer of the Administrative Conference, Standardization News, Nov./Dec. 2012, at 18.
Presentations
- Ms. Bremer regularly speaks on administrative law issues, and particularly about her research on regulatory incorporation by reference.
- A clip of one such presentation from May 2012, which runs approximately eight minutes, is available here:
