The following discussion explores the interaction between law and economics as these two disciplines relate to the issues which arise under section 7 of the Clayton Act, as amended in 1950, and examines the correlative problems implicit in the working arrangements between lawyers and economists when they are asked to counsel an enforcement agency or an acquiring or acquired company concerning the potential competitive consequences of a merger
Antitrust merger policy suffers from a disconnect between its articulated concerns and the methodolo...
This article will discuss technological capacity, an economic consideration to which some courts see...
This book is an effort to consolidate several different perspectives on antitrust law. First, Profes...
The following discussion explores the interaction between law and economics as these two disciplines...
No congregation of lawyers can be considered complete without a token economist. The role of the eco...
Richard Posner has claimed for an economic analysis of law approach, and more specifically in antitr...
Antitrust law has become a branch of industrial organization, itself a branch of economics. Today ju...
The role of Empirical study in legal decision, even in the rule making, was increased by the economi...
It is the purpose of this Article to examine the Federal Trade Commission\u27s handling, in the Crow...
From its modern origins more than thirty years ago federal merger policy has centered around the use...
The purpose of this paper is to evaluate these new anti-merger instruments on the basis of economic ...
This Article examines current judicial interpretation of Section 7 of the Clayton Act through the le...
The legality of a horizontal merger under section 7 of the Clayton Act turns on a reckoning of its s...
Does recent federal merger regulation make economic sense? Merger activity has clearly increased thi...
Analyzing mergers between firms in a customer-supplier relationship under section 7 of the Clayton A...
Antitrust merger policy suffers from a disconnect between its articulated concerns and the methodolo...
This article will discuss technological capacity, an economic consideration to which some courts see...
This book is an effort to consolidate several different perspectives on antitrust law. First, Profes...
The following discussion explores the interaction between law and economics as these two disciplines...
No congregation of lawyers can be considered complete without a token economist. The role of the eco...
Richard Posner has claimed for an economic analysis of law approach, and more specifically in antitr...
Antitrust law has become a branch of industrial organization, itself a branch of economics. Today ju...
The role of Empirical study in legal decision, even in the rule making, was increased by the economi...
It is the purpose of this Article to examine the Federal Trade Commission\u27s handling, in the Crow...
From its modern origins more than thirty years ago federal merger policy has centered around the use...
The purpose of this paper is to evaluate these new anti-merger instruments on the basis of economic ...
This Article examines current judicial interpretation of Section 7 of the Clayton Act through the le...
The legality of a horizontal merger under section 7 of the Clayton Act turns on a reckoning of its s...
Does recent federal merger regulation make economic sense? Merger activity has clearly increased thi...
Analyzing mergers between firms in a customer-supplier relationship under section 7 of the Clayton A...
Antitrust merger policy suffers from a disconnect between its articulated concerns and the methodolo...
This article will discuss technological capacity, an economic consideration to which some courts see...
This book is an effort to consolidate several different perspectives on antitrust law. First, Profes...