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Abusive Practices in Competition Law
Edited by Fabiana Di Porto and Rupprecht Podszun
Abusive Practices in Competition Law tackles the difficult questions presented to competition lawyers and economists regarding abusive practices: where and when is the red line crossed in competitive advances? When is a company explicitly dominant? How do you handle those who hold superior bargaining power over others but are not classed as dominant?
Monograph Book
- Published in print:
- 28 Dec 2018
- ISBN:
- 9781788117333
- eISBN:
- 9781788117340
- Pages:
- c 512
Show Summary Details
- Abusive Practices in Competition Law
- Copyright
- Contents
- Contributors
- Foreword: important divergences
- Introduction
- Chapter 1: The ordoliberal concept of ‘abuse’ of a dominant position and its impact on Article 102 TFEU
- Chapter 2: The European Commission’s enforcement of abuse cases: a statistical analysis
- Chapter 3: Presumptions and short-cut rules in abuse regulation: (where) do EU and US antitrust approaches meet?
- Chapter 4: The pitfalls of market definition: towards an open and evolutionary concept
- Chapter 5: Exploitative prices in European competition law
- Chapter 6: All’s well that ends well? Abuse regulation in the wake of the financial crisis: the interplay between regulation and the application of competition law to the financial sector
- Chapter 7: The application of Article 102 TFEU in the EU energy sector: a critical evaluation of commitments
- Chapter 8: Abuse without dominance in competition law: abuse of economic dependence and its interface with abuse of dominance
- Chapter 9: Superior bargaining power: dealing with aggregate concentration concerns
- Chapter 10: Unilateral conduct by non-dominant firms: a comparative reappraisal
- Chapter 11: Restraining bargaining power through competition law: superior bargaining position regulation in Japan as compared with the EU
- Chapter 12: Ex ante and ex post control of buyer power
- Chapter 13: The application of the Chinese Antimonopoly Law to state-owned enterprises
- Chapter 14: Unconscionable conduct in the context of competition law with special reference to retailer/supplier relationships within Australia
- Chapter 15: The Italian regulation against the abuse of economic dependence at the crossroads
- Chapter 16: Unconscionable conduct in France
- Chapter 17: Comparative analysis of the Japanese Subcontract Act and the regulations on unfair trade practices in the EU: focus on the grocery industry
- Chapter 18: An alternative perspective for assessing abuse of dominance in emerging markets
- Chapter 19: Abuses of dominant and non-dominant position: a tale of (ir)reconcilable views?
- Index
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Copyright
Monograph Chapter
- Published:
- 28 December 2018
- Category:
- Monograph Chapter
- Pages:
- iv (1 total)
Collection:
Law 2018
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- Abusive Practices in Competition Law
- Copyright
- Contents
- Contributors
- Foreword: important divergences
- Introduction
- Chapter 1: The ordoliberal concept of ‘abuse’ of a dominant position and its impact on Article 102 TFEU
- Chapter 2: The European Commission’s enforcement of abuse cases: a statistical analysis
- Chapter 3: Presumptions and short-cut rules in abuse regulation: (where) do EU and US antitrust approaches meet?
- Chapter 4: The pitfalls of market definition: towards an open and evolutionary concept
- Chapter 5: Exploitative prices in European competition law
- Chapter 6: All’s well that ends well? Abuse regulation in the wake of the financial crisis: the interplay between regulation and the application of competition law to the financial sector
- Chapter 7: The application of Article 102 TFEU in the EU energy sector: a critical evaluation of commitments
- Chapter 8: Abuse without dominance in competition law: abuse of economic dependence and its interface with abuse of dominance
- Chapter 9: Superior bargaining power: dealing with aggregate concentration concerns
- Chapter 10: Unilateral conduct by non-dominant firms: a comparative reappraisal
- Chapter 11: Restraining bargaining power through competition law: superior bargaining position regulation in Japan as compared with the EU
- Chapter 12: Ex ante and ex post control of buyer power
- Chapter 13: The application of the Chinese Antimonopoly Law to state-owned enterprises
- Chapter 14: Unconscionable conduct in the context of competition law with special reference to retailer/supplier relationships within Australia
- Chapter 15: The Italian regulation against the abuse of economic dependence at the crossroads
- Chapter 16: Unconscionable conduct in France
- Chapter 17: Comparative analysis of the Japanese Subcontract Act and the regulations on unfair trade practices in the EU: focus on the grocery industry
- Chapter 18: An alternative perspective for assessing abuse of dominance in emerging markets
- Chapter 19: Abuses of dominant and non-dominant position: a tale of (ir)reconcilable views?
- Index