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  1. Feb 11, 2022 · In this second instalment of ‘the antitrust books you should’ve read in 2022’, we shift our attention from antitrust’s hottest market—gaming—to two books that are more directly related to the practice of antitrust: Direct by Kathryn Judge and The New Goliaths by James Bessen.

  2. Feb 26, 2021 · Two books, Big Tech and the Digital Economy and Controlling Mergers and Market Power, offer fresh and thoughtful analyses of two crucial but controversial branches of antitrust law: abuse of dominance and merger control. The third book, The Brussels Effect, examines the influence of EU (competition) policy on the global stage.

  3. Two books, Big Tech and the Digital Economy and Controlling Mergers and Market Power, offer fresh and thoughtful analyses of two crucial but controversial branches of antitrust law: abuse of dominance and merger control. The third book, The Brussels Effect, examines the influence of EU (competition) policy on the global stage. Access to Document.

    • Competition Law Insight
    • 8-11
    • English
    • 20
  4. Jan 28, 2022 · In this second instalment of ‘the antitrust books you should’ve read in 2022’, we shift our attention from antitrust’s hottest market—gaming—to two books that are more directly related to the practice of antitrust: Direct by Kathryn Judge and The New Goliaths by James Bessen.

  5. Jul 17, 2023 · On May 15, Assistant Professor Daniel Francis JSD ’20 and Murray and Kathleen Bring Professor of Law Christopher Jon Sprigman published Antitrust: Principles, Cases, and Materials, a new openly licensed textbook available for free download.

  6. book review: radical uncertainty: Decision-Making beyond the Numbers by John Kay and Mervyn King. Reviewer Seth Sacher applies the lessons of John Kay and Mervyn King concerning the use of economic models under uncertainty to draw parallels for the practice of antitrust.

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  8. Robert Lande argues that there is a better way for agencies to curb monopolies’ powers: to interpret Section 2 as a no-fault statute. A textualist interpretation shows that Section 2 was designed to impose sanctions on monopolies with-out requiring anticompetitive conduct.

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