The Parker v. Brown (or “state action”) doctrine and the Eleventh Amendment of the Constitution impose differen limits on antitrust suits challenging anticompetitive state regulation. The Supreme Court has developed these two versions of state sovereign immunity separately, and lower courts usually apply the immunities independently of each another (even in the same cases) without explaining their relationship. Nevertheless, the Court has derived the two immunities from the same principle of sovereign immunity, so it is worth considering why and how they differ, and what the consequences of the differences are for antitrust policy. The state action immunity is based on statutory interpretation of the Sherman Act; the Court has shaped the sh...
The Supreme Court\u27s Eleventh Amendment decisions give conflicting signals about what the Amendmen...
Specifically, this Article examines whether settlement agreements and consent decrees resulting from...
In February 1986 the United States Supreme Court in Fisher v. Berkeley\u27 upheld the validity of a ...
The Parker v. Brown (or “state action”) doctrine and the Eleventh Amendment of the Constitution impo...
The Parker v. Brown (or “state action”) doctrine and the Eleventh Amendment of the Constitution impo...
This Article focuses on the application of the state action antitrust inimunity doctrine of Parker v...
The state-action immunity doctrine of Parker v. Brown immunizes anticompetitive state regulations fr...
This Article analyzes the state action exemption by examining the case law to which it has given ris...
The great impact of the Seminole Tribe v. Florida decision will likely be felt in the range of feder...
This Recent Development first considers the evolution of the Parker doctrine in a variety of context...
This article will explore recent court decisions discussion the issue of sovereign state immunity fr...
This Article examines in detail the policies underlying these recent Supreme Court decisions interpr...
Numerous exemptions from the antitrust laws have been recognized to facilitate certain activities wh...
The Eleventh Amendment was ratified in response to Chisholm v. Georgia, which held that the language...
What are the constitutional parameters of state sovereign immunity? The Court has made clear that ce...
The Supreme Court\u27s Eleventh Amendment decisions give conflicting signals about what the Amendmen...
Specifically, this Article examines whether settlement agreements and consent decrees resulting from...
In February 1986 the United States Supreme Court in Fisher v. Berkeley\u27 upheld the validity of a ...
The Parker v. Brown (or “state action”) doctrine and the Eleventh Amendment of the Constitution impo...
The Parker v. Brown (or “state action”) doctrine and the Eleventh Amendment of the Constitution impo...
This Article focuses on the application of the state action antitrust inimunity doctrine of Parker v...
The state-action immunity doctrine of Parker v. Brown immunizes anticompetitive state regulations fr...
This Article analyzes the state action exemption by examining the case law to which it has given ris...
The great impact of the Seminole Tribe v. Florida decision will likely be felt in the range of feder...
This Recent Development first considers the evolution of the Parker doctrine in a variety of context...
This article will explore recent court decisions discussion the issue of sovereign state immunity fr...
This Article examines in detail the policies underlying these recent Supreme Court decisions interpr...
Numerous exemptions from the antitrust laws have been recognized to facilitate certain activities wh...
The Eleventh Amendment was ratified in response to Chisholm v. Georgia, which held that the language...
What are the constitutional parameters of state sovereign immunity? The Court has made clear that ce...
The Supreme Court\u27s Eleventh Amendment decisions give conflicting signals about what the Amendmen...
Specifically, this Article examines whether settlement agreements and consent decrees resulting from...
In February 1986 the United States Supreme Court in Fisher v. Berkeley\u27 upheld the validity of a ...