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International Antitrust Law & Policy: Fordham Corporate Law 2003
Barry Hawk, Editor
Price: $125.00 750 pages. 1 Hardcover Volume.
ISBN-13: 978-1-57823-184-3 / ISBN-10: 1-57823-184-1
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| International Antitrust Law & Policy : Fordham Corporate Law 2003 $125.00 |
Table of Contents
About the Book: Every October the Fordham Corporate Law Institute brings together leading figures from governmental organizations, leading international law firms and corporations and academia to examine and analyze the most important issues in international antitrust and trade policy of the United States, the EU and the world. This work is the most definitive and comprehensive annual analysis of international antitrust law and policy available anywhere. Each annual edition sets out to explore and analysis the areas of antitrust/competition law that have had the most impact in that year. Recent "hot topics" include antitrust enforcement in Asia, Latin America: competition enforcement in the areas of telecommunications, media and information technology. None of the chapters are merely descriptive, all raise questions of policy or discuss new developments and assess there significance and impact on antitrust and trade policy. All chapters, if necessary, are revised and updated before publication. As a result, the reader receives up-to-date practical tips and important analyses of difficult policy issues. The Annuals are an indispensable guide through the sea of international antitrust law.
The Fordham Corporate Law Proceedings are acknowledged as simply the most definitive US/EC annual analysis of antitrust/competition law.
Praise for the Fordham Corporate Law Series:
"... the predominant forum for discussion of leading edge international antitrust issues. Both the conference and the published volume of proceedings are eagerly awaited events on the annual antitrust calendar." - A. Neil Campbell, Vice Chairman of Committee C, (Antitrust and Trade Law) International Bar Association, and; - J. William Rowley Former Chairman of Committee C, (Antitrust and Trade Law) International Bar Association.
"This is the largest single source of information and analysis on Community (now European Union) antitrust law anywhere. ... Also, some of the older papers are still the best statement of the legal principles in certain areas, even if there is recent case law." - Common Market Law Review
"The Panel discussions which come at the end of the articles on a given topic are not only a valuable source of information, but provide an insight into existing and potential future problems together with possible solutions." - World Competition
Volumes Available
2003 Proceedings Summary Table of Contents
Chapter 1 Enforcement of Cartel Law in Ireland
Terry Calvani, Member & Director of Cartel Division, The Competition Authority of Ireland, Dublin.
Chapter 2 The Road to Conviction - The Criminalisation of Cartel Law
Nicholas Green, Brick Court Chambers, Londonhas appeared in over 60 cases before the ECJ and CFI
Chapter 3 An Overview Of Recent Developments In The Antitrust Division’s Criminal Enforcement Program
James M. Griffin, Deputy Assistant Attorney General, U.S. Department of Justice, Antitrust Division, Washington.
Chapter 4 The Fight Against Secret Horizontal Agreement in the EC Competition Policy
Olivier Guersent, Head of the Scrutiny and Coordination Unit, DG Competition, EC Commission, Brussels. He previously served as Deputy Head of the Cartel Unit (2000-2002).
Chapter 5 You Can't Legislate Perfection: The Virtues of Experimentation in the Design of Antitrust Enforcement Regimes
D. Stuart Meiklejohn, Partner Sullivan & Cromwell LLP, New York
Chapter 6 U.S. Antitrust Enforcement Against International Cartels: Trends and Practical Considerations
A. Paul Victor, Weil, Gotshal & Manges LLP; Adjunct Professor, Fordham Law School, New York. Mr. Victor is currently on the ABA Antitrust Section's International Advisory Board and has, in the past, been Vice-Chair of the Section, twice a member of the Section's Council, a member of the Section's Special Committee on International Antitrust, and twice Chair of its International Antitrust Committee
Chapter 7 International Cartels (Roundtable)
A. Paul Victor, Presider (See Above)
Terry Calvani, (See Above)
Nicholas Green, Q.C. (See Above)
James M. Griffin, (See Above)
Olivier Guersent, (See Above)
D. Stuart Meiklejohn, (See Above)
Karen L. Morris, Morris & Morris LLC Wilmington
Chapter 8 Dominant Firm Behavior Under German Competition Law
Dr. Ulf Böge, President of the Bundeskartellamt, Bonn.
Chapter 9 Monopolization Versus Abuse of Dominant Position: An Economist's View
Franklin M. Fisher, Jane Berkowitz Carlton, and Dennis William Carlton Professor of Economics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge. Professor Fisher has served as an expert witness in matters involving antitrust for more then 30 uears. He was IBM's chief economic witness in its antitrust cases of the 1970s and served in a similar role on behalf of the Department of Justice in the Microsoft antitrust case
Chapter 10 DG Competition's Review of the Policy on Abuse of Dominance
Philip Lowe, Director General of the DG Competition, EC Commission, Brussels.
Chapter 11 Dominant Firm Behaviour under UK Competition Law
Sir Derek Morris, Chairman of the UK Competition Commission, London.
Chapter 12 The Common Law Approach and Improving Standards for Analyzing Single Firm Conduct
R. Hewitt Pate, Assistant Attorney General, Antitrust Division, U.S. Department of Justice, Washington.
Chapter 13 Monopolization and Short-Term Profits
Mark R. Patterson, Professor of Law, Fordham University School of Law, New York.
Chapter 14 Anticompetitive Non-Pricing Abuses Under European and National Antitrust Law
John Temple Lang, Counsel, Cleary Gottlieb Steen and Hamilton, Brussels and London; Professor, Trinity College, Dublin; Visiting Senior Research Fellow, Oxford. From 1995-2000, he was Director responsible for telecommunications and media in the Competition Directorate General of the European Commission.
Chapter 15 Monopolization versus Abuse of Dominant Position (Roundtable)
Professor Mark R. Patterson, Presider (See Above)
Ulf Böge, (See Above)
Professor Franklin M. Fisher, (See Above)
Philip Lowe, (See Above)
Sir Derek Morris, (See Above)
R. Hewitt Pate, (See Above)
Dr. John Temple Lang, (See Above)
Chapter 16 EU Competition Policy After May 2004
Mario Monti, Commissioner for Competition, European Commission, Brussels
Chapter 17 The Application of Article 81 in the New Europe
Gerwin Van Gerven, Linklaters, Brussels, Co-Head of Linklaters’ EU & Competition Law Practice Group.
Chapter 18 European Commission Competition Policy (Roundtable)
William T. Lifland, Presider Cahill Gordon & Reindel LLP, New York
Mario Monti, (See Above)
Professor Dimitris N. Tzouganatos, President, Hellenic Competition Commission, Athens
Gerwin Van Gerven, (See Above)
Chapter 19 State Action in Comparative Context: What if Parker v. Brown Were Italian?
Eleanor M. Fox, Walter J. Derenberg Professor of Trade Regulation at New York University School of Law.
Chapter 20 Courts as Economic Experts in European Merger Law
David J. Gerber, Professor, Chicago-Kent College of Law
Chapter 21 State Intervention/State Action - A U.S. and EC Perspective from Cassis de Dijon to Altmark Trans and Beyond: Trends in the Assessment of State Intervention by the European Courts
Mário Marques Mendes, Marques Mendes & Associados, Lisbon.
Chapter 22 State Intervention/State Action – A U.S. Perspective
Timothy J. Muris, Chairman, Federal Trade Commission, Washington
Chapter 23 State Intervention and Action in EC Competition Law
Richard Wainwright and André Bouquet, Principal Legal Advisor and Member of the Legal Service, European Commission, Brussels
Chapter 24 State Intervention/State Action (Roundtable)
Professor David J. Gerber, Presider (See Above)
Professor Eleanor M. Fox, (See Above)
Dr. Mario Marques Mendes, (See Above)
Hon. Timothy J. Muris (See Above)
Richard Wainwright (See Above)
Chapter 25 "East is East and West is West and the Twain Shall Never Meet" Or Shall They?
Stefan D. Amarasinha, Administrator, European Commission, Directorate-General for Trade, Brussels.
Chapter 26 Competition, Trade and Development Before and After Cancun
Frederic Jenny, Vice President, French Competition Council, Paris and Professor of Economics, ESSEC, Paris
Chapter 27 Competition and the WTO: Beyond Cancun
Abbott B. Lipsky, Jr., Partner, Latham & Watkins LLP, Washington. Mr. Lipsky served as Chief Antitrust Counsel for The Coca-Cola Company from 1992-2002.
Chapter 28 WTO Core Principles and Trade/Competition
Dr. Ernst-Ulrich Petersmann, Professor of International and European Law at the European University Institute, Florence; and Joint Chair at its Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies. Former Legal Adviser in the German Ministry of Economic Affairs, GATT and the WTO and legal counsel, member or chairman of numerous GATT and WTO dispute settlement panels.
Chapter 29 International Cooperation Between Developed and Developing Countries
Pamela Sittenfeld, Executive Director of the Technical Unit of the Commission to Promote Competition, Costa Rica
Chapter 30 WTO Core Principles and Trade/Competition Policies (Roundtable)
Frédéric Jenny, Presider (See Above)
Stefan D. Amarasinha, (See Above)
Jacques Bourgeois, Partner, Akin, Gump, Strauss, Hauer & Feld, L.L.P., Brussels
Abbott B. Lipsky, Jr. (See Above)
Pamela Sittenfeld, (See Above)
Debra Valentine, Partner, O’Melveny & Myers, Washington; former General Counsel for the Federal Trade Commission
About the Editor: Barry Hawk is Director of the Fordham Competition (formally Corporate) Law Institute and Partner with Skadden Arps (New York and Brussels). He is former Vice Chair of the ABA Antitrust Section and former Chair of the New York State Bar Association Antitrust Section, as well as Professor at Fordham Law School and Visiting Professor at Michigan Law School, Monash University Law School, New York University Law School and the University of Paris.
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