The extraterritorial enforcement of U.S. antitrust laws has long generated discontent between the United States and several European nations.1 While not alone in attributing extraterritorial jurisdiction to its antitrust laws, the United States is among the minority in this re- gard,2 joined only by the European Economic Community,3 Austria,4 and the Federal Republic of Germany
The Sherman Act applies to trade or commerce with foreign nations. Are there differences in the a...
This article analyzes the conflict between the United States and the United Kingdom regarding the e...
This Note argues that American courts should mitigate the impact of the PTIA on American antitrust l...
This comment will outline the international response to extraterritorial application of United State...
This Comment will review the United States approach to subject matter jurisdiction determinations in...
Few subjects in international law raise such incorrigible conflicts of interest as the exercise of e...
On September 30, 1980, the United States Senate passed a bill that would establish a commission to ...
This Article compares the differing approaches of the United States and the European Community as t...
As students of international law know, there has been a long standing dispute between the United Kin...
In recent years, application of American antitrust laws to activities in foreign commerce has been ...
United States antitrust laws increasingly have affected the international activities of U.S. corpora...
A look back at the last thirty years of United States antitrust\u27s foreign voyages of discovery ...
American antitrust policy in foreign commerce is once again under the pressure of complaints from a...
The basic antitrust statutes of the United States, such as the Sherman Act, the Clayton Act, and the...
Within the last several years two approaches have been taken to tempering the extraterritorial appli...
The Sherman Act applies to trade or commerce with foreign nations. Are there differences in the a...
This article analyzes the conflict between the United States and the United Kingdom regarding the e...
This Note argues that American courts should mitigate the impact of the PTIA on American antitrust l...
This comment will outline the international response to extraterritorial application of United State...
This Comment will review the United States approach to subject matter jurisdiction determinations in...
Few subjects in international law raise such incorrigible conflicts of interest as the exercise of e...
On September 30, 1980, the United States Senate passed a bill that would establish a commission to ...
This Article compares the differing approaches of the United States and the European Community as t...
As students of international law know, there has been a long standing dispute between the United Kin...
In recent years, application of American antitrust laws to activities in foreign commerce has been ...
United States antitrust laws increasingly have affected the international activities of U.S. corpora...
A look back at the last thirty years of United States antitrust\u27s foreign voyages of discovery ...
American antitrust policy in foreign commerce is once again under the pressure of complaints from a...
The basic antitrust statutes of the United States, such as the Sherman Act, the Clayton Act, and the...
Within the last several years two approaches have been taken to tempering the extraterritorial appli...
The Sherman Act applies to trade or commerce with foreign nations. Are there differences in the a...
This article analyzes the conflict between the United States and the United Kingdom regarding the e...
This Note argues that American courts should mitigate the impact of the PTIA on American antitrust l...