'It is a rare book that changes how we understand institutions, but the Reasoning State does exactly that. Stiglitz makes an utterly convincing case that one of the central justifications of the administrative state is its long-overlooked capacity to provide credible and trustworthy decisions. In doing so, he helps reframe how we should think about bureaucracy and charts a course for revitalizing it in the future.' Wendy Wagner, Richard Dale Endowed Chair, University of Texas School of Law
1. Introduction: The reasoning state; 2. Reasoning and distrust: State architecture in complex societies; 3. Instruments of credible reasoning: The role of administrative law; 4. The reform era: Rise of the reasoning state; 5. The reasoning constraint; 6. Reasoning dividends; 7. Diagnosing the administrative state; 8. Lessons applied; Index.