Review from previous edition For any study of the regulation of cartels this work should now become necessary reading. The material is comprehensive, well researched and well written ... This study will undoubtedly shed new light on many of the areas where questions still need to be resolved.

The King's College Law Journal

Harding and Joshua offer a new way of looking at competition law (or cartel law) in a style that is highly readable.

The Cambridge Law Journal

One of the most contentious and high-profile aspects of EU competition law and policy has been the regulation of those serious competition or antitrust violations now often referred to as 'hard core cartels'. Such cartel activity typically involves large and powerful corporate producers and traders operating across Europe and beyond, and comprise practices such as price fixing, bid rigging, market sharing, and limiting production in order to ensure 'market stability' and maintain and increase profits. There is little disagreement now, in terms of competition theory and policy at both international and national levels, regarding the damaging effect of such trading practices on public and consumer interests, and such cartels have been subject to increasing condemnation in the legal process of regulating and protecting competition. Harding and Joshua provide a critical evaluation of the way in which European-level regulation has evolved to deal with the activities of such anti-competitive business cartels. They trace the historical development of cartel regulation in Europe, comparing the more pragmatic and empirical approaches favoured in Europe with the more dogmatic and uncompromising American policy on cartels. In particular, the work considers critically the move towards the use of fully fledged criminal proceedings in this area of legal control, examining evolving aspects of enforcement policy such as the use of leniency programmes and the deployment of a range of criminal law and other sanctions. This new edition of the work covers emerging themes and arguments in the discipline, including the judicial review of decisions against cartels, the criminological and legal basis of the criminalisation of cartel conduct, and the range and effectiveness of sanctions used in response to cartel activity.
Les mer
The regulation of cartels has become a central priority of the European Commission, and a cornerstone of EU competition law. Addressing important developments in law and policy since the first edition, Harding and Joshua provide a systematic, critical, and scholarly analysis of cartel regulation in the EU.
Les mer
Introduction and Overview: Talking About Cartels - The Main Elements of Analysis and Discussion ; 1. Business Cartels: Sleeping With The Enemy ; 2. Models of Legal Control: North America and Europe ; 3. Cartels In Europe, 1870-1945: Das Kartellproblem ; 4. Cartels in Europe, 1945-1970: From Registrable Agreement to Concerted Practice ; 5. A Narrative of Cartel Enforcement in Europe, 1970 to the Present Time ; 6. Proof of Cartel Delinquency: Fashioning the European Cartel Offence ; 7. The Judicial Review of Cartel Control: Testing the Evidence and Due Process ; 8. Negotiating Guilt: Leniency and Breaking the Code of Silence ; 9. The Pathology of Cartels: Addressing Issues of Agency and Responsibility ; 10. Sanctions: A Complex European and International Grid ; 11. Corporate and Individual Sanctions ; 12. The Shape of Things to Come: Cartel Law in the Twenty-first Century ; Bibliography
Les mer
Review from previous edition For any study of the regulation of cartels this work should now become necessary reading. The material is comprehensive, well researched and well written ... This study will undoubtedly shed new light on many of the areas where questions still need to be resolved.
Les mer
`Review from previous edition For any study of the regulation of cartels this work should now become necessary reading. The material is comprehensive, well researched and well written ... This study will undoubtedly shed new light on many of the areas where questions still need to be resolved.' The King's College Law Journal `Harding and Joshua offer a new way of looking at competition law (or cartel law) in a style that is highly readable.' The Cambridge Law Journal
Les mer
Provides an interdisciplinary approach combining legal, economic, and criminological analysis Includes comparative analysis of European and US strategies for dealing with cartels With an author team both academic and practitioner, it provides unique insights into the official investigation of cartels
Les mer
Christopher Harding is Professor of Law in the Department of Law and Criminology at the University of Wales, Aberystwyth. He is the author of numerous books including Criminal Enterprise: Individuals, Organisations and Criminal Responsibility (Willan, 2007) and, with Laurence Koffman, Sentencing and the Penal System: Text and Materials (2nd ed. Sweet and Maxwell, 1995). His teaching and research interests span the fields of European law, International law, penal and legal theory, and the history of crime and punishment. Julian Joshua brings a unique perspective as both an enforcement official for 27 years and now as a defence lawyer, and as a published writer and commentator on many aspects of cartel practice. As a barrister and partner in the antitrust practice of Howrey LLP's Brussels office, he focuses on complex international cartel investigations before the European Commission. Nominated by professional journals as "a leader in the field of cartels work", he specialises in global antitrust investigations by multiple enforcement authorities. As a European Commission cartel enforcer, he was the architect of the European Commission's investigation and enforcement mechanisms in complex cartel cases, including the "dawn raid" and the treatment of cartels as a conspiracy under the concept of the single continuous infringement. He led many successful investigations into Europe-wide price-fixing conspiracies in major industries and was the author of numerous seminal Commission decisions in the cartel area.
Les mer
Provides an interdisciplinary approach combining legal, economic, and criminological analysis Includes comparative analysis of European and US strategies for dealing with cartels With an author team both academic and practitioner, it provides unique insights into the official investigation of cartels
Les mer

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780199551484
Publisert
2010
Utgave
2. utgave
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press
Vekt
814 gr
Høyde
241 mm
Bredde
168 mm
Dybde
31 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
440

Om bidragsyterne

Christopher Harding is Professor of Law in the Department of Law and Criminology at the University of Wales, Aberystwyth. He is the author of numerous books including Criminal Enterprise: Individuals, Organisations and Criminal Responsibility (Willan, 2007) and, with Laurence Koffman, Sentencing and the Penal System: Text and Materials (2nd ed. Sweet and Maxwell, 1995). His teaching and research interests span the fields of European law, International law, penal and legal theory, and the history of crime and punishment. Julian Joshua brings a unique perspective as both an enforcement official for 27 years and now as a defence lawyer, and as a published writer and commentator on many aspects of cartel practice. As a barrister and partner in the antitrust practice of Howrey LLP's Brussels office, he focuses on complex international cartel investigations before the European Commission. Nominated by professional journals as "a leader in the field of cartels work", he specialises in global antitrust investigations by multiple enforcement authorities. As a European Commission cartel enforcer, he was the architect of the European Commission's investigation and enforcement mechanisms in complex cartel cases, including the "dawn raid" and the treatment of cartels as a conspiracy under the concept of the single continuous infringement. He led many successful investigations into Europe-wide price-fixing conspiracies in major industries and was the author of numerous seminal Commission decisions in the cartel area.