The Antitrust Revolution
Oxford University Press Inc (Verlag)
978-0-19-516118-2 (ISBN)
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These economists were responsible for helping to formulate the economic issues, undertake the necessary economic research, and offer the economic arguments in court. As a result, they are uniquely qualified to describe and analyze the cases. Fully updated with the most current examples, this volume provides detailed and comprehensive insight into the central role that is now played and will continue to be played by economics and economists in the antitrust process. The Antitrust Revolution, 4/e, is ideal for undergraduate and graduate classes in industrial organization, government policy, and antitrust/regulation law and economics. It is also a useful reference book for lawyers and economists - both academics and practitioners - who are interested in the types of economic analyses that have been applied in recent antitrust cases. A companion website is now available at www oup.com/antitrustrevolution. New to the fourth edition, the site features cases from the previous three editions.
PART I: HORIZONTAL STRUCTURE; The Economic and Legal Context; Case 1: Manifest Destiny? The Union Pacific and Southern Pacific Railroad Merger (1996); Case 2: Prices, Market Definition, and the Effects of Merger: Staples-Office Depot (1997); Case 3: Potential Competition and Local Telephone Service: The Bell Atlantic-NYNEX Merger (1997); Case 4: The Long Distance Industry: One Merger Too Many? MCI WorldCom and Sprint (2000); Case 5: The British Petroleum/ARCO Merger: Alaskan Crude Oil (2000); Case 6: Efficiencies and High Concentration: Heinz Proposes to Acquire Beech-Nut (2001); PART 2: HORIZONTAL PRACTICES; The Economic and Legal Context; Case 7: Antitrust and Higher Education: MIT Financial Aid (1993); Case 8: Bidding, Bid-Rigging, and School Milk Prices: Ohio v. Trauth (1994); Case 9: Rapid Price Communication and Coordination: The Airline Tariff Publishing Case (1994); Case 10: Global Cartels Redux: The Amino Acid Lysine Antitrust Litigation (1996); Case 11: Sports League Issues: The Relocation of the Los Angeles Rams to St. Louis (1998); Case 12: The Brand Name Prescription Drug Antitrust Litigation (1999); PART 3: VERTICAL AND RELATED MARKET ISSUES; The Economic and Legal Context; Case 13: Revisiting Minimum Resale Price Maintenance: State Oil v. Khan (1997); Case 14: Technology Cross-Licensing Practices: FTC v. Intel (1999); Case 15: Retailer-Instigated Restraints on Suppliers' Sales: Toys "R" Us (2000); Case 16: Bundling: GE-Honeywell (2001); PART 4: NETWORK ISSUES; The Economic and Legal Context; Case 17: Links Between Markets and After-Markets: Kodak (1997); Case 18: Access and Network Effects in the New Economy: AOL-Time Warner (2000); Case 19: Maintenance of Monopoly: U.S. v. Microsoft (2001); Case 20: The American Airlines Case: A Chance to Clarify Predation Policy (2001)
Erscheint lt. Verlag | 14.8.2003 |
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Co-Autor | Lawrence J. White |
Zusatzinfo | numerous figures and tables |
Verlagsort | New York |
Sprache | englisch |
Themenwelt | Recht / Steuern ► EU / Internationales Recht |
Wirtschaft ► Volkswirtschaftslehre | |
ISBN-10 | 0-19-516118-1 / 0195161181 |
ISBN-13 | 978-0-19-516118-2 / 9780195161182 |
Zustand | Neuware |
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