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Northwestern Pritzker School of Law

1983

Europe

Articles 1 - 3 of 3

Full-Text Articles in Law

Trademark Licensing Agreements Under The Eec Law Of Competition, Rene Joliet Jan 1983

Trademark Licensing Agreements Under The Eec Law Of Competition, Rene Joliet

Northwestern Journal of International Law & Business

A vast amount of legal literature has addressed the problem of restrictive patent licensing under Article 85 of the EEC Treaty and a substantial number of decision illustrate the EC Commission's policy on that patent-antitrust issue. In contrast, trademark licensing agreement have hardly caught the attention of legal writers and the Campari case of 1977 is the only decision that deals with them. Such paucity of case law is surprising for two reasons. First, trademark licensing agreement are fairly common business practice in sectors such as beer, soft drinks, aperitifs, chocolate, cigarettes, or clothing; and second, several appliations for exemption …


Book Review: Eec Competition Law: Business Issues And Legal Principles In Common Market Antitrust Cases By U.P. Toepke Jan 1983

Book Review: Eec Competition Law: Business Issues And Legal Principles In Common Market Antitrust Cases By U.P. Toepke

Northwestern Journal of International Law & Business

EEC competition law can be a strange and baffling creature for an observer familiar only with United States antitrust law. There is a tendency to make very straight-forward comparisons between these two systems. Each system is part of a federal structure of legal regulation which applies to practices capable of affecting trade between member states. In additiona, both the Sherman Act and the Treaty of Rome establish two-part scheme for regulation competition with different standards in judging agreements between firms on the one hand and the actions of monopolists or dominant firms on the other hand. Like sections 1 and …


Some Aspects Of The Decision-Making Process In The European Communities, Francis Crijns Jan 1983

Some Aspects Of The Decision-Making Process In The European Communities, Francis Crijns

Northwestern Journal of International Law & Business

The European Community finds itself in a state of almost permanent crisis as the process of integration continues to stagnate; all of its noble objectives still be be realized; and since 1958, bedevilled with many new problems, especially in the areas of environmental and energy policy. Furthermore, the socio-economic sitaution has changed fundamentally with the enlargement of the Community to ten member states in 1981 which has weakened rather then strengthened the possibliities to cope with these difficulties. In addition to these general considerations, institutional factors, such as the procedures according to which decisions are made in the Communities and …