Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2007
OCLC FAST subject heading
Antitrust law
Abstract
Antitrust has entered a gilded age of increased international domestic legislatures, courts, and agencies, and the market as an institution. Existing institutions each have limitations in their ability to address any of the issues in international antitrust exclusively. This Article argues that the ICN is the institution best suited to address these issues. This approach may assist to identify other regulatory areas in which an ICN modeled "soft law" transnational institutional choice may prove to be the most effective way to address international issues.
Recommended Citation
D. Daniel Sokol, Monopolists without Borders: The Institutional Challenge of International Antitrust in a Global Gilded Age, 4 Berkeley Bus. L. J. 37 (2007), available at http://scholarship.law.ufl.edu/facultypub/67
Included in
Antitrust and Trade Regulation Commons, Comparative and Foreign Law Commons, International Law Commons