Today, according to US Department of Justice spokespersons, there are over ninety countries with competition laws, and those countries collectively account for nearly 80 percent of world production. Those numbers furnish some evidence that the philosophy of competition law has indeed spread to all corners of the globe, and that the first step toward international harmonization has already been accomplished. Yet the picture is not quite as rosy as this might suggest: these laws differ from one another, sometimes subtly, sometimes unabashedly so. That fact raises a number of questions that are the topic of this article: How different, as of 2002, are the various competition laws in reality? Are these differences anything we should be worried ...
This paper seeks to explore the sources of substantive divergence between the antitrust regimes of t...
It is the nature of business to cut across national boundaries. Private enterprises export, invest, ...
I share much of Professor Rahi\u27s assessment of the present situation and his desire for a resolut...
Today, according to US Department of Justice spokespersons, there are over ninety countries with com...
Many people who pay attention to the rapid development of antitrust regimes across the globe hold tw...
A single dish cannot serve the tastes of a hundred people, says an ancient Chinese proverb. So it is...
In a global world where businesses become international, National Competition Authorities face diffi...
Competition policy is made at the national level but a great deal of the business activity that it s...
We have experienced nothing short of an explosion in competition law enactment and enforcement over ...
Antitrust and competition laws lie at the nexus of international law and business. Since 1890, antit...
Competition policy is on the WTO agenda for the Doha Round, but it is unlikely that it will result i...
Argues that eliminating international institutions is the best way to solve the problem of inadequat...
In recent years there has been increasing global recognition of the importance and significance of c...
In this Article we focus upon an area in which greater convergence of U.S. policy with the practice ...
The situation is succinctly described by Professor Rahl. There are indeed inconsistencies in competi...
This paper seeks to explore the sources of substantive divergence between the antitrust regimes of t...
It is the nature of business to cut across national boundaries. Private enterprises export, invest, ...
I share much of Professor Rahi\u27s assessment of the present situation and his desire for a resolut...
Today, according to US Department of Justice spokespersons, there are over ninety countries with com...
Many people who pay attention to the rapid development of antitrust regimes across the globe hold tw...
A single dish cannot serve the tastes of a hundred people, says an ancient Chinese proverb. So it is...
In a global world where businesses become international, National Competition Authorities face diffi...
Competition policy is made at the national level but a great deal of the business activity that it s...
We have experienced nothing short of an explosion in competition law enactment and enforcement over ...
Antitrust and competition laws lie at the nexus of international law and business. Since 1890, antit...
Competition policy is on the WTO agenda for the Doha Round, but it is unlikely that it will result i...
Argues that eliminating international institutions is the best way to solve the problem of inadequat...
In recent years there has been increasing global recognition of the importance and significance of c...
In this Article we focus upon an area in which greater convergence of U.S. policy with the practice ...
The situation is succinctly described by Professor Rahl. There are indeed inconsistencies in competi...
This paper seeks to explore the sources of substantive divergence between the antitrust regimes of t...
It is the nature of business to cut across national boundaries. Private enterprises export, invest, ...
I share much of Professor Rahi\u27s assessment of the present situation and his desire for a resolut...