Results 111 to 120 of about 794 (160)
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Foreign Competition in Antitrust Law
The Journal of Law and Economics, 1983IN applying antitrust laws, courts often must define geographic "markets"; the verdict frequently depends upon the definition selected. Legal market definitions have rarely extended beyond the boundaries of the United States. When the principal laws were enacted and first interpreted, protective laws may have made this limitation appropriate.
Leitzinger, Jeffrey J. +1 more
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Antitrust Law in Digital Markets
2023Digital markets present very peculiar characteristics, which have determined a strongly oligopolistic structure of the market. This structure has produced several harmful consequences, both on the functioning of the market and on the development of new businesses and new products.
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Antitrust Law and the Physician Entrepreneur
New England Journal of Medicine, 1985In a recent editorial,1 I discussed the growing trend toward entrepreneurialism among practicing physicians and urged that all sectors of organized medicine issue, as a "statement of conscience," a recommendation that practitioners divorce themselves from any financial interest in the medical marketplace.
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Antitrust Law and the Practice of Radiology
Radiology, 1979Physicians now find it relevant to acquaint themselves with aspects of the law which heretofore were mainly of concern to the business world. One such area is antitrust, which is beginning to affect the practice of radiology. Three phases of the problem are discussed: exclusive privileges contracts; boycotts of nonphysician consultations (i.e., with ...
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Is Blockchain the Death of Antitrust Law? The Blockchain Antitrust Paradox
SSRN Electronic Journal, 2018Western legal systems have historically helped establish trust between parties and reduce transactional uncertainty by providing recourse to legal procedures. Nonetheless, establishing trust still imposes significant transactional costs and blockchain may reduce them to a smaller level.
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Private Enforcement of Antitrust Law
2012The notion of private enforcement assumes some kind of deviation from the general discipline, in order to incentivize judicial initiatives of private parties. European law does not contemplate any consistent proxy of a specific regime shaped after the goal of promoting private initiatives against breach of competition law.
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2020
Abstract The more than 100 competition/antitrust laws around the world play major roles both at home and in other countries. They influence each other in ways that affect decisions everywhere. The book is a new kind of guide that makes this world accessible to anyone, anywhere.
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Abstract The more than 100 competition/antitrust laws around the world play major roles both at home and in other countries. They influence each other in ways that affect decisions everywhere. The book is a new kind of guide that makes this world accessible to anyone, anywhere.
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Innkeeping and the Law of Antitrust
Cornell Hotel and Restaurant Administration Quarterly, 1977Writing in his column, "The Inn-Side of the Law, " Professor John E. H. Sherry of the School's faculty warned readers of the February Quarterly that federal enforcement of antitrust statutes was becoming more stringent and increasingly widespread. In the following article, Professor McConnell of Washington State University provides a brief description ...
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Legal diffusion as protectionism: the case of the U.S. promotion of antitrust laws
Review of International Political Economy, 2023Melike Arslan
exaly

