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Articles 1 - 6 of 6
Full-Text Articles in Comparative and Foreign Law
I Want A New (Generic) Drug: A Comparative Case For Shifting U.S. Generic Drug Policies To Increase Availability And Lower Healthcare Costs, Immer S. Chriswell
I Want A New (Generic) Drug: A Comparative Case For Shifting U.S. Generic Drug Policies To Increase Availability And Lower Healthcare Costs, Immer S. Chriswell
Northwestern Journal of International Law & Business
Enacted in 1984, Hatch-Waxman was intended to increase generic drug availability and make critical healthcare more affordable for Americans. In the nearly forty years following, while it has increased availability of drugs, it has also allowed drug originators to create avenues to profit in ways not intended when the original compromise was struck, undermining its success. Moreover, given a weak antitrust standard against reverse settlement payments proscribed in Actavis, the U.S. faces a dilemma to further improve access to generic medications in the future. The E.U.’s approach to generic drugs, while presently geographically fragmented, is simpler and has a clear …
Corporate Governance In Search Of The Shareholder-Manager Balance Of Power, Razeen Sappideen
Corporate Governance In Search Of The Shareholder-Manager Balance Of Power, Razeen Sappideen
Richmond Journal of Global Law & Business
No abstract provided.
Trouble Abroad: Microsoft's Antitrust Problems Under The Law Of The European Union, Justin O'Dell
Trouble Abroad: Microsoft's Antitrust Problems Under The Law Of The European Union, Justin O'Dell
Georgia Journal of International & Comparative Law
No abstract provided.
The Law And Economics Of (Functional) Antitrust Standing In The United States And The European Union, Jeffrey L. Harrison
The Law And Economics Of (Functional) Antitrust Standing In The United States And The European Union, Jeffrey L. Harrison
UF Law Faculty Publications
To date, and despite pressures toward convergence, the United States and the European Union have taken different paths with respect to the enforcement of antitrust laws by private parties and, therefore, differ dramatically in levels of functional standing. U.S. law is more encouraging to private enforcement than E.U. law but has a narrower view of whom those private parties are permitted to be. In the European Union, the eligible parties are broad but the motivation of any single party to bring an action is quite low. In the United States, the substantive law and much of the procedural law flow …
Exiting The Euro, Frederick V. Perry, Wendy Gelman
Exiting The Euro, Frederick V. Perry, Wendy Gelman
Richmond Journal of Global Law & Business
The Crisis in the Euro Zone threatens to break up the Euro and perhaps derail the European Union itself. Many argue that a Member State exiting the Euro would be not only unthinkable, but also a practical impossibility, given the status of the “constitutionality” of European law, the treaties forming the European Union and the Euro, and customary European law. Europeans have been, for centuries, very creative in forging economic and trading alliances—some that appeared to be political alliances and even elementary union. They have also, on more than one occasion, attempted to confect monetary stability. Some of these attempts …
Opportunistic Discipline: Using Eurasian Integration To Improve Sanctions Against Belarus, Ilya Zlatkin
Opportunistic Discipline: Using Eurasian Integration To Improve Sanctions Against Belarus, Ilya Zlatkin
Richmond Journal of Global Law & Business
No abstract provided.