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The Enforcement of Competition Law in Europe
This inquiry describes, analyses and proposes reforms to competition law in fifteen European countries.
Thomas M. J. Möllers (Edited by), Andreas Heinemann (Edited by)
9780521881104, Cambridge University Press
Hardback, published 10 January 2008
740 pages
23.4 x 16.3 x 4.6 cm, 1.3 kg
'… this volume is a most reliable guide to the various national regimes plaintiffs and claimants will have to operate under for years to come. In both scenarios, it provides most valuable pointers for national and European lawmakers exploring options of legal reform.' Friedrich Wenzel Bulst, European Competition Law Review
In the debate on the enforcement of competition law, many take the view that Europe should avoid the traps US law has fallen into by admitting excessive litigation. European law should not pave the way for judicial proceedings which ultimately serve the interests of lawyers or other agents rather than injured parties. This inquiry describes the state of remedies in competition law in fifteen European countries, analyses the underlying determinants, and proposes ways of improving the enforcement of competition law. The International and European legal frameworks are presented, as is the approach of US-American law. It is argued that efforts to strengthen private enforcement of antitrust law should benefit from the rich European experience in unfair competition law. The divergence between the two fields of law is not so huge that a completely different treatment is justified. Thus, a specifically European way of competition law enforcement could be developed.
Part I. Remedies in Unfair Competition and Consumer Protection Law: 1. Setting the basics - the legal framework
2. Contemporary solutions: the case studies
3. Results and conclusions for remedies in unfair competition law
4. Graphics
Part II. Remedies in Antitrust Law: 5. Introduction
6. Private enforcement of competition law: a comparative perspective David J. Gerber
7. Case studies
8. Conclusions
9. Outlook: the link between unfair competition law and antitrust law.
Subject Areas: Competition law / Antitrust law [LNCH], EU & European institutions [JPSN2]