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Daubert and the Proper Role for the Courts in Health, Safety and Environmental Regulation
 

McGarity TO. Daubert and the Proper Role for the Courts in Health, Safety and Environmental Regulation. Am J Public Health, Supplement (July 2005).

Abstract:

Assigning a Daubert-like gatekeeper role to courts engaged in judicial review of risk assessments prepared by federal agencies is a profoundly bad idea. I describe the role of courts in reviewing regulatory agency decisionmaking and explore the potential impact of incorporating Daubert principles into administrative law. A Daubert form of judicial review will prevent agencies from employing a “weight of the evidence” approach, forcing them to adopt a “corpuscular” approach that rewards efforts by regulatees to find and exaggerate flaws in individual scientific studies. Consequently, applying Daubert to federal agency decisionmaking will have a predictable impact on regulatory policy that runs directly counter to the precautionary policies that animate most health, safety, and environmental statutes.

Read more: Coronado Conference I papers.