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BIOGRAPHICAL
INFORMATION
JAMES
V. DeLONG
is a writer, lawyer, and consultant in Washington, D.C.,
concentrating on property rights and environmental issues.
He is also active in the areas of regulatory reform,
intellectual property, industrial and government management,
and legal reform. He is an Adjunct Scholar of the Competitive
Enterprise Institute of Washington, D.C., and writes
for scholarly, professional, and popular publications.
He
has appeared as a witness before Congress and state
regulatory agencies, and he speaks frequently at professional
and trade association meetings.
His
prior professional positions include service as Research
Director of the Administrative Conference of the United
States; Assistant Director for Special Projects in the
Bureau of Consumer Protection of the Federal Trade Commission;
Director of Programs for the Drug Abuse Council (a private
foundation); Staff Analyst in the Office of Program
Evaluation of the U.S. Bureau of the Budget; and Litigation
Associate in a large law firm.
Mr.
DeLong is a magna cum laude graduate of Harvard Law
School in 1963, where he was Book Review Editor of the
Harvard Law Review, and a cum laude graduate of Harvard
College in 1960. He is a member of the bars of the District
of Columbia, the State of California, and the Supreme
Court of the United States, and has served on the Committee
on Scholarship of the Administrative Law Section of
the American Bar Association. He received a Senior Executive
Service (SES) Outstanding Award in 1981, while working
for the Administrative Conference of the United States.
His
publications include: Privatizing Superfund,
Cato Institute Policy Analysis (December 1995); "The
Criminalization of Just About Everything," The
American Enterprise (March/April 1994); Wasting
Away: Mismanaging Municipal Solid Waste, CEI Monograph
(May 1994); "New Wine for a New Bottle: Judicial
Review in the Regulatory State," 72 Virginia
Law Review 399 (1986); and "How to Convince
an Agency: A Handbook for Policy Advocates," Regulation
(Sept./Oct. 1982), and many more.
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