Includes bibliographical references (p. ).For more than one hundred years, American antitrust laws have helped to define the legal framework supporting the continuously expanding and developing American economy. This legal framework has not remained unchanged; rather, the antitrust laws have been revised and re-interpreted at fairly regular intervals, leading to periodic changes in the scope and conduct of antitrust enforcement. Interest in and support for the antitrust enterprise may be seen to rise and fall in rough correlation with changes in the political and economic cycles. Prominent accounts of the development of American antitrust enforcement have tended to emphasize the importance of Congress, the President, the agencies, and, most...
International audienceWe interrogate the legal and economic history to analyse the process by which...
There is no antitrust law without antitrust law enforcement. Legal action turns economic and jurispr...
article published in law reviewIt is often pointed out that while the United States Supreme Court is...
Although law and economics has influenced nearly every area of American law, few have been as deeply...
Today, some antitrust commentators have called for the Supreme Court to abandon its focus on protect...
Over the past forty years, the federal courts have relied more and more on economic theory to inform...
When Richard D. Cudahy graduated from the Yale Law School, antitrust law in the United States was at...
An economically oriented and technocratic view of antitrust has dominated the discipline’s practice ...
This book is an effort to consolidate several different perspectives on antitrust law. First, Profes...
In his seminal 1984 article, The Limits of Antitrust, Judge Frank Easterbrook proposed that courts a...
The institutionalist approach to law and economics declined markedly after the Second World War and ...
In this article, the authors interrogate legal and economic history to analyze the process by which ...
The image of antitrust law that emerges from Justice Stevens\u27s opinions has, I shall argue, sever...
The United States Supreme Court has decided in a number of cases how Section One 1 of the Sherman Ac...
In antitrust litigation, the factual complexity and economic nature of the issues involved require t...
International audienceWe interrogate the legal and economic history to analyse the process by which...
There is no antitrust law without antitrust law enforcement. Legal action turns economic and jurispr...
article published in law reviewIt is often pointed out that while the United States Supreme Court is...
Although law and economics has influenced nearly every area of American law, few have been as deeply...
Today, some antitrust commentators have called for the Supreme Court to abandon its focus on protect...
Over the past forty years, the federal courts have relied more and more on economic theory to inform...
When Richard D. Cudahy graduated from the Yale Law School, antitrust law in the United States was at...
An economically oriented and technocratic view of antitrust has dominated the discipline’s practice ...
This book is an effort to consolidate several different perspectives on antitrust law. First, Profes...
In his seminal 1984 article, The Limits of Antitrust, Judge Frank Easterbrook proposed that courts a...
The institutionalist approach to law and economics declined markedly after the Second World War and ...
In this article, the authors interrogate legal and economic history to analyze the process by which ...
The image of antitrust law that emerges from Justice Stevens\u27s opinions has, I shall argue, sever...
The United States Supreme Court has decided in a number of cases how Section One 1 of the Sherman Ac...
In antitrust litigation, the factual complexity and economic nature of the issues involved require t...
International audienceWe interrogate the legal and economic history to analyse the process by which...
There is no antitrust law without antitrust law enforcement. Legal action turns economic and jurispr...
article published in law reviewIt is often pointed out that while the United States Supreme Court is...