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Articles 31 - 34 of 34
Full-Text Articles in Law
How Italian Colors Guts Private Antitrust Enforcement By Replacing It With Ineffective Forms Of Arbitration, Einer Elhauge
How Italian Colors Guts Private Antitrust Enforcement By Replacing It With Ineffective Forms Of Arbitration, Einer Elhauge
Fordham International Law Journal
The United States is becoming more like Europe, and not in a good way. For a long time, the central difference between antitrust enforcement in the United States and Europe has been that the United States features not only public enforcement, but a vigorous system of private antitrust enforcement, while in Europe, public agencies have had an effective monopoly on antitrust enforcement. But that difference is on the verge of collapsing. We are achieving a form of convergence; but contrary to expectations, this convergence is not coming from recent European efforts to facilitate private enforcement, which have not yet overcome …
The Crisis Response In Europe's Economic And Monetary Union: Overview Of Legal Developments, René Smits
The Crisis Response In Europe's Economic And Monetary Union: Overview Of Legal Developments, René Smits
Fordham International Law Journal
Writing about developments in Europe’s Economic and Monetary Union (“EMU”) at this juncture in time is a bold endeavour and a hazardous undertaking. ‘Bold’ because the developments are manifold, highly technical in nature and deeply contested among the players and the public—between Greeks and Germans, between mainstream political parties and (emerging) parties taking a different view, and between politicians and the electorate. ‘Hazardous’ as developments go so fast that these lines shall be partially outdated the moment they appear in published form. And yet, there is a need to explore and explain. That’s what this contribution seeks to do: to …
The Changing Function And Structure Of International Law, Joel P. Trachtman
The Changing Function And Structure Of International Law, Joel P. Trachtman
Florida State University Journal of Transnational Law & Policy
No abstract provided.
Eu Fundamental Rights And Member State Action After Lisbon: Putting The Ecj's Case Law In Its Context, Bernhard Schima
Eu Fundamental Rights And Member State Action After Lisbon: Putting The Ecj's Case Law In Its Context, Bernhard Schima
Fordham International Law Journal
Early in 2013, the Court of Justice of the European Union (“ECJ”) handed down two judgments on the same day which might contain the blueprint for the fundamental rights architecture of the European Union (“EU”) for years to come. Much has already been written about those judgments, and it appears appropriate at this time to evaluate their impact in light of their reception and subsequent developments of the case law. To that effect, this contribution will provide some elements of background before briefly presenting the two cases, commenting on their legal solidity, and recalling how they have been received. It …