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Articles 1 - 6 of 6
Full-Text Articles in Consumer Protection Law
Breaking The Bank: Revisiting Central Bank Of Denver After Enron And Sarbanes-Oxley, Celia Taylor
Breaking The Bank: Revisiting Central Bank Of Denver After Enron And Sarbanes-Oxley, Celia Taylor
ExpressO
No abstract provided.
Virginia Cellular And Highland Cellular: The Fcc Establishes A Framework For Eligible Telecommunications Carrier Designation In Rural Study Areas, Mark C. Bannister
Virginia Cellular And Highland Cellular: The Fcc Establishes A Framework For Eligible Telecommunications Carrier Designation In Rural Study Areas, Mark C. Bannister
Federal Communications Law Journal
In 1996, Congress passed the first substantial rework of the Communications Act of 1934. This Act was intended to benefit consumers by encouraging competition and establishing a series of explicit mechanisms for assuring universal service. One of the outcomes is the creation of significant controversy over the federal, and in some cases, state universal service subsidy for the class of telecommunications providers typically known as wireless or cellular and defined by federal statute as "commercial mobile radio service" ("CMRS"). Incumbent local exchange carriers ("ILECs") characterize these subsidies as a windfall and as unnecessary to provide wireless phone service. They argue …
Universal Service: Problems, Solutions, And Responsive Policies, Allen S. Hammond Iv
Universal Service: Problems, Solutions, And Responsive Policies, Allen S. Hammond Iv
Federal Communications Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Antitrust Implications Of The Credit Card Interchange Fee And An International Survey, Avril Mckean Dieser
Antitrust Implications Of The Credit Card Interchange Fee And An International Survey, Avril Mckean Dieser
Loyola Consumer Law Review
No abstract provided.
How The Antitrust Modernization Commission Should View State Antitrust Enforcement, Robert L. Hubbard, James Yoon
How The Antitrust Modernization Commission Should View State Antitrust Enforcement, Robert L. Hubbard, James Yoon
Loyola Consumer Law Review
No abstract provided.
Choosing Among Antitrust Liability Standards Under Incomplete Information: Assessments Of And Aversions To The Risk Of Being Wrong, Barbara Ann White
Choosing Among Antitrust Liability Standards Under Incomplete Information: Assessments Of And Aversions To The Risk Of Being Wrong, Barbara Ann White
All Faculty Scholarship
This essay analyzes the three papers presented on a panel I organized as chair of the AALS Antitrust Section entitled Evolving Antitrust Treatment of Dominant Firms for the 2005 Annual Meetings. Steve Salop’s and Doug Melamed’s papers recommend standards for government intervention while David McGowan argues why the government should not.
I create a framework within which to understand the three papers’ relationship to each other, by building on McGowan’s characterization of courts’ antitrust decisions. Since antitrust decisions are based on inherently incomplete real world information, they are subject to “error costs”: Courts are at risk of “false positives” (finding …