The antitrust laws are fully stated in two statutes that seem absurdly brief in relation to the work they do. Their brevity in relation to coverage has led to three phenomena. First is the tendency of courts to use the statutory text as no more than a starting point, treating it as a general principle, or “Magna Carta,” of free enterprise, and sometimes ignoring the statutory language altogether. Second, courts have responded to the statutory brevity with judicial development of numerous rules not mentioned in the statutory texts. The third phenomenon is a kind of expansionism, or belief that the antitrust laws can be used to control the entire world, or at least the entire economic world. This article considers what antitrust policy would ...
This book is an effort to consolidate several different perspectives on antitrust law. First, Profes...
Substantive antitrust law has dramatically shrunk. The shrinkage, which began in the 1970s with the ...
In 1890, Senator John Sherman described the act which now bears his name as a bill of rights, a cha...
Antitrust opinions rely heavily on economic analysis but little on statutory text. Surprisingly, thi...
This Article ascertains the overall purpose of the antitrust statutes in two very different ways. Fi...
This Article analyzes the evolution of Antitrust Law (known as Competition Law in Europe) in United ...
Throughout its life, federal antitrust law has been subject to literally dozens of limitations. Spec...
Antitrust law is the law of the land, safely ensconced in our legal traditions. The present paper ar...
Judges and scholars frequently describe antitrust as a common-law system predicated on open-textured...
Antitrust doctrine is under heavy fire in the academic literature. Modern criticism of antitrust doc...
Antitrust law is a blunt instrument for dealing with many claims of anticompetitive standard setting...
Antitrust is a brief for the uselessness of international law. Notwithstanding the apparent utility ...
The author analyzes the conceptual bases of two rules applied in antitrust litigation: the first all...
Legal doctrines vary in the extent to which they apply either detailed, categorical rules or broad, ...
Antitrust law has been with us since 1890, the year that Congress passed the Sherman Antitrust Act. ...
This book is an effort to consolidate several different perspectives on antitrust law. First, Profes...
Substantive antitrust law has dramatically shrunk. The shrinkage, which began in the 1970s with the ...
In 1890, Senator John Sherman described the act which now bears his name as a bill of rights, a cha...
Antitrust opinions rely heavily on economic analysis but little on statutory text. Surprisingly, thi...
This Article ascertains the overall purpose of the antitrust statutes in two very different ways. Fi...
This Article analyzes the evolution of Antitrust Law (known as Competition Law in Europe) in United ...
Throughout its life, federal antitrust law has been subject to literally dozens of limitations. Spec...
Antitrust law is the law of the land, safely ensconced in our legal traditions. The present paper ar...
Judges and scholars frequently describe antitrust as a common-law system predicated on open-textured...
Antitrust doctrine is under heavy fire in the academic literature. Modern criticism of antitrust doc...
Antitrust law is a blunt instrument for dealing with many claims of anticompetitive standard setting...
Antitrust is a brief for the uselessness of international law. Notwithstanding the apparent utility ...
The author analyzes the conceptual bases of two rules applied in antitrust litigation: the first all...
Legal doctrines vary in the extent to which they apply either detailed, categorical rules or broad, ...
Antitrust law has been with us since 1890, the year that Congress passed the Sherman Antitrust Act. ...
This book is an effort to consolidate several different perspectives on antitrust law. First, Profes...
Substantive antitrust law has dramatically shrunk. The shrinkage, which began in the 1970s with the ...
In 1890, Senator John Sherman described the act which now bears his name as a bill of rights, a cha...