This paper undertakes a comparative assessment of the development of competition in Botswana, Ethiopia and Nigeria. These three African countries have all sought to introduce domestic competition law since 2000. The paper identifies the different factors that have contributed to the relative success in introducing competition law in Botswana, as compared to both the Nigerian and Ethiopian experience. The paper highlights the significance of both domestic and external factors in nurturing competition and good economic governance. It concludes that effective enforcement of competition law is founded on both internal and international dynamics. While domestic will for competition is a necessary precondition, the case of Botswana indicates how ...
This thesis uses policy diffusion theories as the theoretical framework for the study of the prolife...
Meeting: Competition Policy and Consumer Interest in the Global Economy, 12-13 Oct. 2001, Geneva, C
Antitrust is a blunt instrument aimed at the wrong problem. So say the authors of this provocative a...
Competition policy and law appertain to market and/or market reform which has become an important in...
This thesis follows the recognized position that a means of improving the Nigerian socio-economic en...
This article examines the process of harmonisation of competition law and policy in Africa in the co...
Prior to the return of democracy in 1999, the Nigerian economy was characterised by government-spons...
African countries introduced competition laws to their legal and economic systems as they increasing...
Shaping markets through competition and economic regulation is at the heart of addressing the develo...
South Africa\u27s new competition policy and law were drafted during the early years of South Africa...
The relevance of Competition Law to Consumer Protection has long been identified in developed econom...
The disproportionate power base held by a few dominant firms within an industry provides the basis f...
Magister Legum - LLMTrade liberalisation, free-market system, privatisation and deregulation have be...
This contribution was prepared for the “Global Competition Law Conference” held at Chicago-Kent Coll...
The starting point for this thesis is the established position that in free economies, by protecting...
This thesis uses policy diffusion theories as the theoretical framework for the study of the prolife...
Meeting: Competition Policy and Consumer Interest in the Global Economy, 12-13 Oct. 2001, Geneva, C
Antitrust is a blunt instrument aimed at the wrong problem. So say the authors of this provocative a...
Competition policy and law appertain to market and/or market reform which has become an important in...
This thesis follows the recognized position that a means of improving the Nigerian socio-economic en...
This article examines the process of harmonisation of competition law and policy in Africa in the co...
Prior to the return of democracy in 1999, the Nigerian economy was characterised by government-spons...
African countries introduced competition laws to their legal and economic systems as they increasing...
Shaping markets through competition and economic regulation is at the heart of addressing the develo...
South Africa\u27s new competition policy and law were drafted during the early years of South Africa...
The relevance of Competition Law to Consumer Protection has long been identified in developed econom...
The disproportionate power base held by a few dominant firms within an industry provides the basis f...
Magister Legum - LLMTrade liberalisation, free-market system, privatisation and deregulation have be...
This contribution was prepared for the “Global Competition Law Conference” held at Chicago-Kent Coll...
The starting point for this thesis is the established position that in free economies, by protecting...
This thesis uses policy diffusion theories as the theoretical framework for the study of the prolife...
Meeting: Competition Policy and Consumer Interest in the Global Economy, 12-13 Oct. 2001, Geneva, C
Antitrust is a blunt instrument aimed at the wrong problem. So say the authors of this provocative a...