Journal ArticleThere is an area some eight to ten miles off Astoria, Oregon, called "The Bar," where the fresh water of the Columbia River meets the salt water of the Pacific Ocean. It is a place of turbulent, shifting currents and choppy waters where moving sand bars trap even the most experienced sailors. Like sailing "The Bar," crossing intellectual disciplines is often not the simple blend of one glass of water with another, but the turbid mixture of one substance and force with another
In this article, the authors interrogate legal and economic history to analyze the process by which ...
Antitrust scholars frequently refer to an “ideological pendulum” to describe the rise and fall of tr...
In this article, ProfessorLevy uses a recent book recom- mending extensive changes in the antitrust ...
Journal ArticleFelix S. Cohen has observed that [a]n ethics, like a metaphysics, is no more certain ...
This Article begins with a historical question about whatever happened to the antitrust movement. Th...
The deeper truths evoked by patent ships sailing an antitrust sea are three. First, free competition...
In this paper, I report on a series of recent decisions in antitrust cases by the U.S. Supreme Court...
Over its 140 year history, ocean liner shipping has almost always enjoyed an antitrust exemption per...
Both the law and economics of antitrust have undergone significant changein the past twenty years. T...
Sometimes an entire field goes astray. When its dominant members make a major mistake, an opportunit...
Over the past forty years, the federal courts have relied more and more on economic theory to inform...
This Article discusses whether antitrust laws can apply to rules of professional conduct and ethics....
This article examines the roles of economics and politics in U.S. antitrust from several perspective...
Journal ArticleThe question of how antitrust policy "ought" to treat vertical distribution restraint...
Marking the centennial anniversary of Standard Oil Co. v. United States, we argue that much of the c...
In this article, the authors interrogate legal and economic history to analyze the process by which ...
Antitrust scholars frequently refer to an “ideological pendulum” to describe the rise and fall of tr...
In this article, ProfessorLevy uses a recent book recom- mending extensive changes in the antitrust ...
Journal ArticleFelix S. Cohen has observed that [a]n ethics, like a metaphysics, is no more certain ...
This Article begins with a historical question about whatever happened to the antitrust movement. Th...
The deeper truths evoked by patent ships sailing an antitrust sea are three. First, free competition...
In this paper, I report on a series of recent decisions in antitrust cases by the U.S. Supreme Court...
Over its 140 year history, ocean liner shipping has almost always enjoyed an antitrust exemption per...
Both the law and economics of antitrust have undergone significant changein the past twenty years. T...
Sometimes an entire field goes astray. When its dominant members make a major mistake, an opportunit...
Over the past forty years, the federal courts have relied more and more on economic theory to inform...
This Article discusses whether antitrust laws can apply to rules of professional conduct and ethics....
This article examines the roles of economics and politics in U.S. antitrust from several perspective...
Journal ArticleThe question of how antitrust policy "ought" to treat vertical distribution restraint...
Marking the centennial anniversary of Standard Oil Co. v. United States, we argue that much of the c...
In this article, the authors interrogate legal and economic history to analyze the process by which ...
Antitrust scholars frequently refer to an “ideological pendulum” to describe the rise and fall of tr...
In this article, ProfessorLevy uses a recent book recom- mending extensive changes in the antitrust ...