This Note will attempt to determine the correct standard of review for all modifications of existing consent decrees. Part I. A. examines the current standards for modifications of consent decrees. It concludes that the APP A does not apply to such orders. Part I. B. then examines the differing standards that are currently applied to defendant-initiated modification motions without the government\u27s consent, government-initiated modification motions without the defendant\u27s consent, and consented-to modifications. Part II argues that these varying standards have little justification since the same substantive concerns exist in all modification cases. Part III explores the two major concerns - (1) the public interest and (2) the integrit...
The Federal Trade Commission and the Antitrust Division of the U.S. Department of Justice will soon ...
This Note argues that Congress should amend the APPA to require a judicial public interest determina...
This Article focuses on two limits to federal antitrust law—the Noerr-Pennington and state action do...
This Note will attempt to determine the correct standard of review for all modifications of existing...
For nearly eighty years the Department of Justice has disposed of civil antitrust suits through sett...
In the wake of this uncertainty, this Note analyzes the proper scope of judicial review of consent d...
A common method of dispute resolution in institutional reform litigation is the consent decree. Alth...
The genius of the Sherman Act has been said to lie in its generality and adaptability. Thus the act ...
I begin in Part I by describing the dynamics of the consent decree process: why parties want consent...
Several recent developments have shifted the attention of legal minds to an area of administrative l...
Consent decrees raise serious Article III concerns. When litigants agree on their rights and jointly...
In Rufo v. Inmates of Suffolk County Jail, the Court held that courts may modify consent decrees res...
This comment will deal with a review of the history, nature, and use of the consent decree, an analy...
The law of contract modifications poses an analytical paradox: Modifications should be presumptively...
The subject of this symposium is consent decrees, and I have been asked to think about judges and co...
The Federal Trade Commission and the Antitrust Division of the U.S. Department of Justice will soon ...
This Note argues that Congress should amend the APPA to require a judicial public interest determina...
This Article focuses on two limits to federal antitrust law—the Noerr-Pennington and state action do...
This Note will attempt to determine the correct standard of review for all modifications of existing...
For nearly eighty years the Department of Justice has disposed of civil antitrust suits through sett...
In the wake of this uncertainty, this Note analyzes the proper scope of judicial review of consent d...
A common method of dispute resolution in institutional reform litigation is the consent decree. Alth...
The genius of the Sherman Act has been said to lie in its generality and adaptability. Thus the act ...
I begin in Part I by describing the dynamics of the consent decree process: why parties want consent...
Several recent developments have shifted the attention of legal minds to an area of administrative l...
Consent decrees raise serious Article III concerns. When litigants agree on their rights and jointly...
In Rufo v. Inmates of Suffolk County Jail, the Court held that courts may modify consent decrees res...
This comment will deal with a review of the history, nature, and use of the consent decree, an analy...
The law of contract modifications poses an analytical paradox: Modifications should be presumptively...
The subject of this symposium is consent decrees, and I have been asked to think about judges and co...
The Federal Trade Commission and the Antitrust Division of the U.S. Department of Justice will soon ...
This Note argues that Congress should amend the APPA to require a judicial public interest determina...
This Article focuses on two limits to federal antitrust law—the Noerr-Pennington and state action do...