Power to interpret the Sherman Act, and thus power to make broad changes to antitrust policy, is currently vested in the Supreme Court. But reevaluation of existing competition rules requires economic evidence, which the Court cannot gather on its own, and technical economic savvy, which it lacks. To compensate for these deficiencies, the Court has turned to amicus briefs to supply the economic information and reasoning behind its recent changes to antitrust policy. This Article argues that such reliance on amicus briefs makes Supreme Court antitrust adjudication analogous to administrative notice-and-comment rulemaking. When the Court pays careful attention to economic evidence and arguments presented in amicus briefs, it moves the process...
Courts struggle with the tension between national competition laws, on the one hand, and state and l...
Antitrust law has become a branch of industrial organization, itself a branch of economics. Today ju...
The Supreme Court speaks rarely about the meaning of the Sherman Act. When the Court does speak, its...
Power to interpret the Sherman Act, and thus power to make broad changes to antitrust policy, is cur...
The United States Supreme Court has decided in a number of cases how Section One 1 of the Sherman Ac...
Antitrust law has been with us since 1890, the year that Congress passed the Sherman Antitrust Act. ...
Substantive antitrust law has dramatically shrunk. The shrinkage, which began in the 1970s with the ...
In the course of damning the market giant Standard Oil, the Supreme Court declared that the purpose ...
Demands for major antitrust reform are coming from all directions: politicians, industrial organizat...
Although law and economics has influenced nearly every area of American law, few have been as deeply...
This Article ascertains the overall purpose of the antitrust statutes in two very different ways. Fi...
Over the past forty years, the federal courts have relied more and more on economic theory to inform...
Passage of the Sherman Act in the United States in 1890 set the stage for a century of jurisprudence...
Judges and scholars frequently describe antitrust as a common-law system predicated on open-textured...
The proper role of neoclassical economic theory in the resolution of antitrust disputes will continu...
Courts struggle with the tension between national competition laws, on the one hand, and state and l...
Antitrust law has become a branch of industrial organization, itself a branch of economics. Today ju...
The Supreme Court speaks rarely about the meaning of the Sherman Act. When the Court does speak, its...
Power to interpret the Sherman Act, and thus power to make broad changes to antitrust policy, is cur...
The United States Supreme Court has decided in a number of cases how Section One 1 of the Sherman Ac...
Antitrust law has been with us since 1890, the year that Congress passed the Sherman Antitrust Act. ...
Substantive antitrust law has dramatically shrunk. The shrinkage, which began in the 1970s with the ...
In the course of damning the market giant Standard Oil, the Supreme Court declared that the purpose ...
Demands for major antitrust reform are coming from all directions: politicians, industrial organizat...
Although law and economics has influenced nearly every area of American law, few have been as deeply...
This Article ascertains the overall purpose of the antitrust statutes in two very different ways. Fi...
Over the past forty years, the federal courts have relied more and more on economic theory to inform...
Passage of the Sherman Act in the United States in 1890 set the stage for a century of jurisprudence...
Judges and scholars frequently describe antitrust as a common-law system predicated on open-textured...
The proper role of neoclassical economic theory in the resolution of antitrust disputes will continu...
Courts struggle with the tension between national competition laws, on the one hand, and state and l...
Antitrust law has become a branch of industrial organization, itself a branch of economics. Today ju...
The Supreme Court speaks rarely about the meaning of the Sherman Act. When the Court does speak, its...