ABSTRACT

Antitrust and competition law is a fast moving area of law and the subject of extensive academic research. The aim of this volume is to select articles as tools for understanding how antitrust and competition law is applied to unilateral conduct which is harmful to the consumer and to the competitiveness of the market. The articles examine the meaning of dominance and monopolisation and show that although legal and economic rules have been developed to establish whether undertakings hold such strong market positions, it is often difficult to determine with certainty that the undertaking being investigated meets the threshold. The various debates on pricing and non-pricing conduct are also represented as are the conflicts that have arisen regarding the exercise of intellectual property rights by powerful undertakings, particularly in the context of the new economies. The volume includes scholarly articles published on both sides of the Atlantic and enables a greater understanding of the application of antitrust and competition law from the point of view of economics and politics.

part I|1 pages

The Meaning of Dominance and Monopolization

chapter 2|14 pages

The abuse of Hoffmann-La Roche

the meaning of dominance under EC Competition Law

chapter 3|46 pages

Market Definition

An Analytical Overview

chapter 4|4 pages

Markets without substitutes

substitution versus constraints as the key to market definition

chapter 5|38 pages

Assigning Market Shares

chapter 7|46 pages

Oligopoly and the Antitrust Laws

A Suggested Approach

chapter 8|12 pages

Considering the oligopoly problem

part II|1 pages

Abuse and Violation

chapter 16|26 pages

Margin Squeeze Abuse

part III|1 pages

Dominance/Monopolization and Intellectual Property Rights

chapter 18|12 pages

Challenges of the New Economy

Issues at the Intersection of Antitrust and Intellectual Property

chapter 19|20 pages

Antitrust in the New Economy

chapter 20|36 pages

Limiting the Scope of Article 82 Ec

What can the Eu Learn from the U.S. Supreme Court’s Judgment in Trinko in the Wake of Microsoft, Ims, and Deutsche Telekom?