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Articles 1 - 9 of 9
Full-Text Articles in Law
Antitrust And Baseball – A League Of Their Own, Y. Shukie Grossman
Antitrust And Baseball – A League Of Their Own, Y. Shukie Grossman
Fordham Intellectual Property, Media and Entertainment Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Consumer Pricing For Atm Services: Antitrust Constraints And Legislative Alternatives, Karen L. Grimm, David A. Balto
Consumer Pricing For Atm Services: Antitrust Constraints And Legislative Alternatives, Karen L. Grimm, David A. Balto
Georgia State University Law Review
No abstract provided.
Antitrust In A World Of Interrelated Economies: The Interplay Between Antitrust And Trade Policies In The Us And The Eec, Alyssa A. Grikscheit
Antitrust In A World Of Interrelated Economies: The Interplay Between Antitrust And Trade Policies In The Us And The Eec, Alyssa A. Grikscheit
Michigan Law Review
A Review of Antitrust In a World of Interrelated Economies: The Interplay Between Antitrust and Trade Policies in the US and the EEC by Mário Marques Mendes
Heinrich Kronstein And The Development Of United States Antitrust Law, David J. Gerber
Heinrich Kronstein And The Development Of United States Antitrust Law, David J. Gerber
All Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Market Power Through Imperfect Information: The Staggering Implications Of Eastman Kodak Co. V. Image Technical Services And A Modest Proposal For Limiting Them, Michael S. Jacobs
Market Power Through Imperfect Information: The Staggering Implications Of Eastman Kodak Co. V. Image Technical Services And A Modest Proposal For Limiting Them, Michael S. Jacobs
Maryland Law Review
No abstract provided.
The Differing Treatment Of Efficiency And Competition In Antitrust And Tortious Interference Law, Gary Myers
The Differing Treatment Of Efficiency And Competition In Antitrust And Tortious Interference Law, Gary Myers
Faculty Publications
During the last twenty years, there has been a revolution in antitrust law. As a result of extensive scholarly and judicial analysis, a new learning has developed concerning the content, role, and effect of antitrust doctrines. This trend has focused primarily on the primacy of consumer welfare and economic efficiency. Most commentators now assume that these two interrelated goals are the principal, if not exclusive, concerns of antitrust law. The United States Supreme Court has responded to these new approaches by modifying or altering antitrust law in a long series of cases. Similarly, the new learning has affected the focus …
Antitrust And Sports: Must Competition On The Field Displace Competition In The Market?, Joseph P. Bauer
Antitrust And Sports: Must Competition On The Field Displace Competition In The Market?, Joseph P. Bauer
Journal Articles
A casual glance at the daily newspapers would suggest that athletes and sports teams spend almost as much time squaring off in the courts as they do on the playing fields. Professional football players complain that the teams for which they play and the National Football League have conspired to impose illegal restraints on their ability to offer their services to other teams. A baseball team went to court to challenge the decision by the now-deposed Commissioner of Baseball to shift it from one division to another. College players, coaches, and universities all contend that various rules imposed by the …
Two Sherman Act Section 1 Dilemmas: Parallel Pricing, The Oligopoly Problem, And Contemporary Economic Theory, Jonathan Baker
Two Sherman Act Section 1 Dilemmas: Parallel Pricing, The Oligopoly Problem, And Contemporary Economic Theory, Jonathan Baker
Articles in Law Reviews & Other Academic Journals
No abstract provided.
Chicago Takes It On The Chin: Imperfect Information Could Play A Crucial Role In The Post-Kodak World, Robert H. Lande
Chicago Takes It On The Chin: Imperfect Information Could Play A Crucial Role In The Post-Kodak World, Robert H. Lande
All Faculty Scholarship
This article briefly describes the revolutionary potential of the Supreme Court's Kodak decision. It discusses the dramatic changes in antitrust that would occur if the field took concepts such as imperfect information, lock-in effects, strategic behavior, and other post-Chicago ideas seriously.
Among the effects of this decision could be:
(1) Imperfect information could substitute for traditional market share-based market power and reveal that a market that structurally appeared competitive in fact was behaving anticompetitively. Market share-based safe harbors are more likely to be inappropriate.
(2) This imperfect information-based market power also can lead to relatively direct harm to consumers by …