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Small Liberal Arts Colleges, Fraternities, And Antitrust: Rethinking Hamilton College, Mark D. Bauer
Small Liberal Arts Colleges, Fraternities, And Antitrust: Rethinking Hamilton College, Mark D. Bauer
Mark D Bauer
Many colleges have abolished men's and women's fraternities, and many more plan to do so. Regardless of one's personal feelings towards fraternities, demands to shut down housing and cease dining operations raise important antitrust concerns. Because the fraternities offer competitive housing and food services, colleges are using their market power to eliminate business rivals.
Separating The Wheat From The Chaff: Restrictive Agreement In Light Of The Supreme Court’S Recent Decisions (In Hebrew), Michal Gal
Michal Gal
No abstract provided.
The Ecology Of Antitrust: Preconditions For Competition Law Enforcement In Developing Countries, Michal Gal
The Ecology Of Antitrust: Preconditions For Competition Law Enforcement In Developing Countries, Michal Gal
Michal Gal
The number of developing countries that have adopted a competition law has grown exponentially over the past two decades. Yet the mere adoption of a competition law is a necessary but not sufficient condition for it to be part of market reform. Just as ecological conditions determine the ability of a flower to bloom, so do some preconditions affect the ability to apply a competition law effectively. This study seeks to identify the ecology of antitrust in developing countries: the soil, sun, water and pesticides of competition law adoption and enforcement. In particular, it analyzes the socio-economic ideology (soil), the …
La Prohibición De Los Acuerdos Restrictivos De La Competencia: Una Concepción Privatística Del Derecho Antimonopolio, Jesús Alfaro Águila-Real
La Prohibición De Los Acuerdos Restrictivos De La Competencia: Una Concepción Privatística Del Derecho Antimonopolio, Jesús Alfaro Águila-Real
Jesús Alfaro Águila-Real
No abstract provided.
Monopoly Pricing As An Antitrust Offense In The U.S. And The Ec: Two Systems Of Belief About Monopoly?, Michal Gal
Monopoly Pricing As An Antitrust Offense In The U.S. And The Ec: Two Systems Of Belief About Monopoly?, Michal Gal
Michal Gal
Monopoly pricing per se, that is without need of proof of anti-competitive conduct or intent, is regulated very differently on both sides of the Atlantic, at least in theory. U.S. antitrust law sets a straightforward rule: monopoly pricing, as such, is not regulated. In contrast, under EC law excessive pricing is considered an abuse of dominance and is punishable by fine and subject to a prohibitory order. These approaches fit the divide between the regulation of exclusionary and exploitative conduct: whereas exclusionary conduct is an offense against antitrust law on both sides of the Atlantic, exploitative conduct generally only breaches …