Antitrust plaintiffs, attempting to avert or circumvent unfavorable results in federal court, have with increasing frequency begun break-away state court actions under less restrictive state laws. Defendants have sought to avoid the consequences of such break-away actions through removal to federal- court. This removal tactic was summarily approved by the Supreme Court in Federated Department Stores, Inc. v. Moitie. This Article criticizes the Court\u27s disposition of the removal issue in Moitie as a departure from accepted notions of concurrent federal and state authority. This new direction, as exemplified in the microcosm of antitrust law, should be rejected by the federal courts in favor of other procedural alternatives. The Article ...
The state-action immunity doctrine of Parker v. Brown immunizes anticompetitive state regulations fr...
How great is the divide between federal and state courts when state law mirrors federal law? Can fed...
The collateral order doctrine is perhaps the most significant exception to the general rule that onl...
Antitrust plaintiffs, attempting to avert or circumvent unfavorable results in federal court, have w...
This Article focuses on two limits to federal antitrust law—the Noerr-Pennington and state action do...
This brief essay analyzes the Supreme Court\u27s 2015 decision in the North Carolina Dental case, as...
article published in law journalFederal judicial deference to state and local regulation is at the c...
The past decade has witnessed an historic rejection of state control of markets in eastern Europe. E...
Currently the Antitrust Modernization Commission is considering numerous proposals for adjusting the...
Antitrust uses economic analysis to assess various trade-offs involving efficiency. Even assuming th...
The focus of the article is on the proper role of U.S. state governments in regulating international...
There is no theme more familiar to constitutional law than the clash between federal power and state...
If the antitrust remedy a private party pursues would likely have anticompetitive consequences, woul...
Arbitration clauses, which are supposed to do away with litigation, have ironically spawned many com...
State and local regulations that anticompetitively favor certain producers to the detriment of consu...
The state-action immunity doctrine of Parker v. Brown immunizes anticompetitive state regulations fr...
How great is the divide between federal and state courts when state law mirrors federal law? Can fed...
The collateral order doctrine is perhaps the most significant exception to the general rule that onl...
Antitrust plaintiffs, attempting to avert or circumvent unfavorable results in federal court, have w...
This Article focuses on two limits to federal antitrust law—the Noerr-Pennington and state action do...
This brief essay analyzes the Supreme Court\u27s 2015 decision in the North Carolina Dental case, as...
article published in law journalFederal judicial deference to state and local regulation is at the c...
The past decade has witnessed an historic rejection of state control of markets in eastern Europe. E...
Currently the Antitrust Modernization Commission is considering numerous proposals for adjusting the...
Antitrust uses economic analysis to assess various trade-offs involving efficiency. Even assuming th...
The focus of the article is on the proper role of U.S. state governments in regulating international...
There is no theme more familiar to constitutional law than the clash between federal power and state...
If the antitrust remedy a private party pursues would likely have anticompetitive consequences, woul...
Arbitration clauses, which are supposed to do away with litigation, have ironically spawned many com...
State and local regulations that anticompetitively favor certain producers to the detriment of consu...
The state-action immunity doctrine of Parker v. Brown immunizes anticompetitive state regulations fr...
How great is the divide between federal and state courts when state law mirrors federal law? Can fed...
The collateral order doctrine is perhaps the most significant exception to the general rule that onl...