The adversarial presentation of expert scientific evidence tends to obscure academic consensus. In the context of litigation, small, marginal disagreements can be made to seem important and settled issues can be made to appear hopelessly deadlocked. This Article explores this dynamic\u27s effect on antitrust litigation. Modem antitrust law is steeped in microeconomics, and suits rely heavily on economic expert witnesses. Indeed, expert testimony is often the whole game in an antitrust dispute because experts testify about dispositive issues such as the competitive effect of a business practice or the relevant boundaries of a market. And the Supreme Court has encouraged-even engineered-this delegation to economic authority. But when antitr...
The appropriate role of the economic expert in antitrust litigation is to seek the truth, whereas th...
Although law and economics has influenced nearly every area of American law, few have been as deeply...
Modern antitrust law pursues a seemingly unitary goal: competition. In fact, competition—whether def...
The adversarial presentation of expert scientific evidence tends to obscure academic consensus. In t...
In antitrust litigation, the factual complexity and economic nature of the issues involved require t...
Courts lack consistency and coherence in admissibility decisions regarding expert testimony based on...
When it comes to finding whether a firm has violated antitrust law, economists are often called upon...
The history of the admissibility standard for expert testimony in American courtrooms reveals that t...
Today one cannot imagine antitrust litigation without the use of economic experts. Defendants and pl...
In this practice-oriented article the author examines the use of economic experts in antitrust cases...
Antitrust law is moving away from rules (ex ante, limited factor liability determinants) and toward ...
Economists regularly appear as expert witnesses in antitrust litigations. The chapter analyzes how t...
In 2011, with five words of dicta, the Supreme Court opened Pandora’s box for private antitrust enfo...
Antitrust law has become a branch of industrial organization, itself a branch of economics. Today ju...
Many scholars debate whether a competition between experts in legal, political, or economic contexts...
The appropriate role of the economic expert in antitrust litigation is to seek the truth, whereas th...
Although law and economics has influenced nearly every area of American law, few have been as deeply...
Modern antitrust law pursues a seemingly unitary goal: competition. In fact, competition—whether def...
The adversarial presentation of expert scientific evidence tends to obscure academic consensus. In t...
In antitrust litigation, the factual complexity and economic nature of the issues involved require t...
Courts lack consistency and coherence in admissibility decisions regarding expert testimony based on...
When it comes to finding whether a firm has violated antitrust law, economists are often called upon...
The history of the admissibility standard for expert testimony in American courtrooms reveals that t...
Today one cannot imagine antitrust litigation without the use of economic experts. Defendants and pl...
In this practice-oriented article the author examines the use of economic experts in antitrust cases...
Antitrust law is moving away from rules (ex ante, limited factor liability determinants) and toward ...
Economists regularly appear as expert witnesses in antitrust litigations. The chapter analyzes how t...
In 2011, with five words of dicta, the Supreme Court opened Pandora’s box for private antitrust enfo...
Antitrust law has become a branch of industrial organization, itself a branch of economics. Today ju...
Many scholars debate whether a competition between experts in legal, political, or economic contexts...
The appropriate role of the economic expert in antitrust litigation is to seek the truth, whereas th...
Although law and economics has influenced nearly every area of American law, few have been as deeply...
Modern antitrust law pursues a seemingly unitary goal: competition. In fact, competition—whether def...