توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب Competition Law and Economic Inequality
نام کتاب : Competition Law and Economic Inequality
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : قانون رقابت و نابرابری اقتصادی
سری : Hart Studies in Competition Law
نویسندگان : Jan Broulík, Katalin Cseres (editors)
ناشر : Hart Publishing
سال نشر : 2022
تعداد صفحات : 379
ISBN (شابک) : 9781509959235 , 9781509959259
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 6 مگابایت
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فهرست مطالب :
Contents\nList of Contributors\nIntroduction: Economic Inequality, Competition and Law\n I. Setting the Scene\n II. About this Book\nPART I: CONCEPTUAL AND EMPIRICAL FOUNDATIONS\n1. Competition and Equality: A Republican Account\n I. Introduction\n II. The Republican Tradition: Competitive Markets as Catalysts of Greater Equality\n III. The Egalitarian Tenets of the \'Republican Antitrust\' Tradition in the US and in Europe\n IV. The Decline of the Symbiotic Relationship between Competition and Equality\n V. Conclusion\n2. Competition, Concentration, and Inequality through the Lens of the Theory of Reflexive Modernisation\n I. Introduction\n II. Reflexive Modernisation\n III. The Paradoxical Goals of Competition Policy\n IV. Applying the Theory of Reflexive Modernisation to New Forms of Concentration in Digital Markets\n V. Conclusion\n3. A Cross-Country Analysis of the Relationship between Competition Law and Economic Inequality\n I. Introduction\n II. The Link between Competition Law, Competition, and Inequality\n III. Data Description\n IV. Econometric Specifications and Results\n V. Discussion of Results\n VI. Conclusion\nPART II: ECONOMIC INEQUALITY IN DOCTRINES OF INDIVIDUAL JURISDICTIONS\n4. Antitrust and Inequality: The History of (In)Equality in Competition Law and Its Guide to the Future\n I. Introduction\n II. Main Points and Claims in the Literature\n III. Observations on the Complexity of the Problem\n IV. Country/Jurisdiction Studies: How Equality Is Used in the Competition Law\n V. Integrating Equality\n VI. The Objections to Including Equality as a Competition Law Value\n VII. Recommendations\n VIII. Conclusion\n5. Economic Inequality and Abuse of Dominance in EU Competition Law\n I. Introduction\n II. Market Dominance, Competition Law, and Inequality\n III. Constitutional Perspective: Should Economic Inequality be a Relevant Concern?\n IV. Is Economic Inequality a Relevant Concern under Article 102?\n V. Conclusion\n6. Exploring Legal and Policy Options to Address the Competition-Inequality Nexus: The Case of South Africa\n I. Introduction\n II. Unpacking the Competition-Inequality Nexus\n III. Some Options for Addressing Competition-Inequality Nexus in South Africa\n IV. Conclusion: What Role for Competition Law and Policy in Reducing Economic Inequality in South Africa?\n7. How Concerns of Economic Inequality and Poverty are Reflected in Efficiency-Based Competition Laws: A Developing Country Perspective\n I. Introduction\n II. Redistributive Effects of Competition Law and Implications for Developing Countries\n III. Ways of Reflecting Economic Inequality and Poverty Concerns in Competition Law and Its Enforcement\n IV. Reflecting Economic Inequality and Poverty in Vietnam\'s Competition Law\n V. Vietnam\'s Experience and Its Transferability to Developed Countries\n VI. Conclusion\nPART III: SPECIFIC PROBLEMS AND MARKETS\n8. Network Externalities, Income Inequality and the Role of Competition Law\n I. Introduction\n II. Interventions to Reduce Inequality: Ex Post Redistribution through Taxes versus Ex Ante Prevention through Law\n III. Network Externalities and Lock-In Effects\n IV. Case Law Analysis and Policy Suggestions\n V. Conclusion\n9. Competition Law, Inequalities and Healthcare: Insights from EU and National Frameworks\n I. Introduction\n II. Framing Healthcare Access and Affordability in Competition and Competition Policy\n III. The EU Competition Law Framework and Healthcare Access and Affordability\n IV. Experiences from England: Competition in Healthcare\n V. Conclusion\n10. Foregrounding Distributive Justice in European Labour Antitrust\n I. Introduction\n II. The Monopoly Analysis of Collective Bargaining\n III. The Current Approach to the EU Labour Exemption\n IV. Rethinking the Legal Economics of Collective Bargaining and Growth\n V. Mechanisms to Limit Distributive Backfiring in a \'Second-Best\' World\n VI. Conclusion\nBibliography\nIndex