Law and Competition in Twentieth Century Europe: Protecting Prometheus
Autor David J. Gerberen Limba Engleză Hardback – 26 mar 1998
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780198262855
ISBN-10: 019826285X
Pagini: 486
Dimensiuni: 163 x 243 x 29 mm
Greutate: 0.9 kg
Editura: Clarendon Press
Colecția Clarendon Press
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 019826285X
Pagini: 486
Dimensiuni: 163 x 243 x 29 mm
Greutate: 0.9 kg
Editura: Clarendon Press
Colecția Clarendon Press
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Recenzii
... a sucessful and useful book that causes a careful reader to look at the world through a new and important lens.
It is impossible to do justicce to this substantial and important volume in just a few sentences, but let it suffice to say that the core of the work is a narrative about the evolution of competition law and policy, and the weight of the argument is provided by a set of interwoven concerns about the role of law in society, about the forms and means of control of competiton and competitive markets, and about the dispersion and convergence of cultural, political and economic influences and effects between different jurisdictions in varied geographical and historical spaces.
For those interested in wider perspectives, in the origins, place and future of competition law, this book is an indispensible must.
There are books that one wishes had been written earlier and that oneself and others had read earlier. This book is in that category ... Current controversies about European competition law are full of examples in which differing conceptions of competition law go unrecognized and thereby impede mutual understanding. Gerber's book helps us to recognize these differences and thus to reduce these comprehension problems ... This is a fascinating book, and one can only regret that it wasn't written earlier
It is really a great book, and I am suggesting to everybody to read it.
there is almost nothing published on the history and development of competition law in Europe. It is this important and interesting topic which this book sets out to deal with. It does this very well... interesting and important book ... Most of the comments are clear and sound, and nothing important is omitted. The perspective is broad, but there is plenty of detail.
The practising lawyer... may learn more here than elsewhere about the background and history of what has become a highly complex regulatory field. And he or she may close the book at the end with deeper insights of why the rules are what they are today, and how they came about in a complex political, economic and legal setting. And perhaps even more importantly, the story told may assist in guiding us in finding future ways. Elegantly written... this is a timely and fascinating book... essential reading for all seeking to understand the subject, going beyond contemporary technicalities of competition law and policies.
fascinating treatise ... the policy arguments dealt with in this book are indeed fascinating, and very persuasively argued ... For those interested in wider perspectives, in the origins, place, and future of competition law, this book is an indisputable must, and on my book shelf joins Thorelli as a competition law text that is simultaneously good armchair reading.
It is impossible to do justicce to this substantial and important volume in just a few sentences, but let it suffice to say that the core of the work is a narrative about the evolution of competition law and policy, and the weight of the argument is provided by a set of interwoven concerns about the role of law in society, about the forms and means of control of competiton and competitive markets, and about the dispersion and convergence of cultural, political and economic influences and effects between different jurisdictions in varied geographical and historical spaces.
For those interested in wider perspectives, in the origins, place and future of competition law, this book is an indispensible must.
There are books that one wishes had been written earlier and that oneself and others had read earlier. This book is in that category ... Current controversies about European competition law are full of examples in which differing conceptions of competition law go unrecognized and thereby impede mutual understanding. Gerber's book helps us to recognize these differences and thus to reduce these comprehension problems ... This is a fascinating book, and one can only regret that it wasn't written earlier
It is really a great book, and I am suggesting to everybody to read it.
there is almost nothing published on the history and development of competition law in Europe. It is this important and interesting topic which this book sets out to deal with. It does this very well... interesting and important book ... Most of the comments are clear and sound, and nothing important is omitted. The perspective is broad, but there is plenty of detail.
The practising lawyer... may learn more here than elsewhere about the background and history of what has become a highly complex regulatory field. And he or she may close the book at the end with deeper insights of why the rules are what they are today, and how they came about in a complex political, economic and legal setting. And perhaps even more importantly, the story told may assist in guiding us in finding future ways. Elegantly written... this is a timely and fascinating book... essential reading for all seeking to understand the subject, going beyond contemporary technicalities of competition law and policies.
fascinating treatise ... the policy arguments dealt with in this book are indeed fascinating, and very persuasively argued ... For those interested in wider perspectives, in the origins, place, and future of competition law, this book is an indisputable must, and on my book shelf joins Thorelli as a competition law text that is simultaneously good armchair reading.
Notă biografică
Professor David Gerber is Professor of Law and Director of the International and Comparative Law Programme at Chicago-Kent College of Law Illinois Institute of Technology. He has been a Visiting Professor in Law at Munich and Freiburg in Germany, and Stockholm in Sweden. He is also a member of the International Academy of Comparative Law. He formerly chaired the comparative law section of the Association of American Law Schools, and has been a member of the executive committee of the American Society of Comparative Law. He is also the recipient of the Francis Deak Younger Scholars Prize of the American Society of International Law.