00997pab a2200121 454500008004000000100002100040245003700061260000900098300001700107520067700124650002300801773005100824180718b2006 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d aTennert, R. John aAdministrative law as pragmatism c2006 ap.1339-1361. aThis article argues that administrative law in the United States should be largely pragmatic in orientation, and that pragmatism provides the best normative framework for judicial decision-making in American administrative jurisprudence for administrators and judges. Just as considerations of context and consequence are critical to the administrative process, so too should they be integrated into the process of administrative adjudication. The article reviews a series of classic administrative law cases and describes how pragmatism provides the most appropriate normative framework for understanding the administrative law process in the United states. - Reproduced. aAdministrative law aInternational Journal of Public Administration