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This Liber Amicorum highlights the global reach of Professor Whish's influence. Enforcers, academics and practitioners from around the world pay tribute to the mastery of competition law that Professor Whish embodies, and has shared with students with trademark erudition and enthusiasm. At this important juncture in the history of the EU and the UK, this tribute is a timely compendium of views from both sides. The legendary 'object box' is analysed anew, along with enforcement issues. It also includes voices from further afield, discussing recent developments in competition law. The diversity of topics covered is testament to the breadth of Professor Whish's authority, and illustrates a legal landscape which he has helped shape through clarity and common sense.
In this book, ten prominent authors offer eleven contributions that provide their varying perspectives on the subject of consumer choice in the EU, Member States, and in the US. Various aspects of consumer choice are covered, such as the concept of freedom of choice in the application of EU competition law; the antitrust enforcement application of consumer choice by agencies; the historical origin of consumer choice as a concept grounded in German ordoliberalism; the economic approach adopted as well as the use of consumer welfare and consumer choice in EU competition law to reconcile it with intellectual property law; consumer choice as a mean to facilitate convergence between US antitrust law and EU competition law, etc. This volume offers readers an exhaustive and multifaceted discussion of the crucial concept of consumer choice and its relevance for modern competition law.
This book gathers essays from over 20 leading authors to pay tribute to Albert A. Foer, founder of the American Antitrust Institute.
Dr. Frédéric Jenny is the Renaissance man of competition policy. As an economist, scholar, judge and enforcer, he has helped transform the landscape of global competition enforcement. In the first volume of this Liber Amicorum, distinguished members of both Bar and Bench, as well as academics from around the world, come together to bear testimony to his international achievements. This collection of 21 articles celebrates Dr. Jenny's career thus far, and also explores other timely and topical areas of competition law and policy.
Leading competition professionals from around the world present reflections & forecasts on topical issues in antitrust. Nestled among the exchanges are insights into the professional paths of the women interviewed. Through personal anecdotes, they share perspectives & offer advice to young practitioners interested in joining this field.
This first volume of Douglas H. Ginsburg Liber Amicorum gathers original essays that pay tribute to the exceptional career of Judge Ginsburg. Known in the legal community as a "giant in antitrust law," Judge Ginsburg has heard appeals in several of the US landmark antitrust cases of our times. This first volume looks at Judge Ginsburg's career, offering a unique showcase of antitrust issues acutely analyzed by prominent lawyers, enforcers, academics and economists from the US, Europe and abroad.
This 3rd edition of the Competition Law Digest provides a synthesis of EU and national leading antitrust cases from 1990 to 2016. The book is structured in two parts: Part I deals with competition rules in general (cartels, unilateral practices, mergers...), whereas Part II is dedicated to specific sectors (automobile, energy, insurance, sports...). The Digest is to date the sole publication which allows lawyers, economists, in-house counsels, academics, and government officials to draw comparisons between competition case law and policies in the EU and in the Member States, and, in some instances, US antitrust law. This is an essential guide to learn about the most recent competition law trends.
The thesis presents a comprehensive and cross-sectional discussion of buyer power to determine the legal regulation of buyer conducts under EU competition law. It focuses on four main research areas: understanding buyer power; analysing the legal treatment given to the exertion of anticompetitive buyer power under EU competition law; exploring theories of harm applicable to buyer power abuse, and ascertaining the welfare standard employed for buyer power cases.
This is the first EU competition law treatise that fully integrates economic reasoning in its treatment of the decisional practice of the European Commission and the case-law of the European Court of Justice. Since the European Commission's move to a "more economic approach" to competition law reasoning and decisional practice, the use of economic argument in competition law cases has become a stricter requirement. Many national competition authorities are also increasingly moving away from a legalistic analysis of a firm's conduct to an effect-based analysis of such conduct, indeed most competition cases today involve teams composed of lawyers and industrial organisation economists. Competi...
The Digest comprises of 41 essays and is structured in two parts: Part I deals with competition rules in general, whereas Part II is dedicated to specific sectors. The Digest contributes towards building a corpus of information on national doctrine and precedent in the EU, US and worldwide.