- EAN13
- 9782802757559
- Éditeur
- Bruylant
- Date de publication
- 16/03/2017
- Collection
- Global Competition Law Centre
- Langue
- anglais
- Fiches UNIMARC
- S'identifier
The Notion of Restriction of Competition
Revisiting the Foundations of Antitrust Enforcement in Europe
Massimo Merola, Damien Gerard, Bernd Meyring
Bruylant
Global Competition Law Centre
Autre version disponible
-
Papier - Bruylant Edition 109,00
The transformations induced by the process of “modernisation”, including in
its substantive dimension, as well as recent judgments by the EU Courts, have
left many lawyers and economists wary as to the standards actually governing
findings of antitrust infringement under EU competition law, thereby affecting
their ability to advise businesses effectively on the design of their
commercial practices.
While not ignoring institutional constraints, this volume revisits the notion
of restriction of competition in the framework of Articles 101 and 102 TFEU
with a view to taking stock of recent developments, to identifying common
trends and to informing the application of core EU antitrust principles in
current market contexts.
Associating lawyers and economists, practitioners and academics, it seeks both
to revisit long-standing theories of harm to competition and to explore novel
forms of antitrust concerns.
its substantive dimension, as well as recent judgments by the EU Courts, have
left many lawyers and economists wary as to the standards actually governing
findings of antitrust infringement under EU competition law, thereby affecting
their ability to advise businesses effectively on the design of their
commercial practices.
While not ignoring institutional constraints, this volume revisits the notion
of restriction of competition in the framework of Articles 101 and 102 TFEU
with a view to taking stock of recent developments, to identifying common
trends and to informing the application of core EU antitrust principles in
current market contexts.
Associating lawyers and economists, practitioners and academics, it seeks both
to revisit long-standing theories of harm to competition and to explore novel
forms of antitrust concerns.
S'identifier pour envoyer des commentaires.