By surfacing the most‑cited scholarship, the list reveals current research hotspots and guides lawyers, academics, and policymakers toward the analyses shaping administrative law in 2026.
SSRN has become the de‑facto repository for legal scholarship, offering real‑time download metrics that signal which ideas are resonating across academia and practice. The January 2026 Administrative Law reading list leverages this data, giving scholars a curated snapshot of the field’s most influential recent work. By aggregating papers that have attracted the most attention in the past 60 days, the list provides a data‑driven shortcut to cutting‑edge analysis, saving researchers hours of sifting through the broader SSRN catalog.
The selected ten papers illustrate the thematic currents shaping administrative law today. Stephen Vladeck’s critique of Supreme Court supremacy and Nicholas Parrillo’s examination of litigation as a business strategy reflect ongoing debates over judicial power and corporate regulatory behavior. Meanwhile, Bryant Walker Smith and Matthew Wansley’s piece on regulating robotaxis highlights the law’s rapid response to autonomous‑vehicle technology. Contributions from Cass Sunstein on welfare‑theory paradoxes and Emily Bremer with William Eskridge on the unitary executive underscore the discipline’s continued engagement with constitutional foundations amid evolving administrative structures.
For practitioners, law schools, and policy makers, the reading list serves as a practical intelligence tool. It pinpoints which scholarly arguments are gaining traction, informing litigation tactics, curriculum development, and regulatory drafting. The inclusion of forthcoming articles in premier law reviews signals that these topics will dominate forthcoming conferences and policy discussions. As the list updates monthly and a March edition is slated, stakeholders can track shifting priorities and anticipate the next wave of influential administrative‑law scholarship.
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