Harmonising EU Competition Litigation: The New Directive and Beyond

دانلود کتاب Harmonising EU Competition Litigation: The New Directive and Beyond

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کتاب هماهنگ کردن دعاوی رقابتی اتحادیه اروپا: دستورالعمل جدید و فراتر از آن نسخه زبان اصلی

دانلود کتاب هماهنگ کردن دعاوی رقابتی اتحادیه اروپا: دستورالعمل جدید و فراتر از آن بعد از پرداخت مقدور خواهد بود
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توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب Harmonising EU Competition Litigation: The New Directive and Beyond

نام کتاب : Harmonising EU Competition Litigation: The New Directive and Beyond
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : هماهنگ کردن دعاوی رقابتی اتحادیه اروپا: دستورالعمل جدید و فراتر از آن
سری : Swedish Studies in European Law
نویسندگان : , ,
ناشر : Hart Publishing,
سال نشر : 2016
تعداد صفحات : 377
ISBN (شابک) : 9781849467629 , 9781509902743
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 2 مگابایت



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فهرست مطالب :


Foreword\nEditors\' Preface\nContents\nTable of Cases\nTable of Legislation\nPart I: Main Policy Issues and ParticularChallenges\n 1. Introduction to the Directive on Competition Damages Actions\n 1. The New Directive\n 2. The Background\n 3. Aims and Important Features\n 4. The Disclosure of Evidence\n 5. Will the Directive Fulfil its Aims?\n 2. Private Enforcement of EU Competition Law: A Comparison with, and Lessons from, the US\n 1. Introduction\n 2. The Private Litigation System in the US\n 3. Barriers to Private Litigation in the EU\n 4. Conclusions\n 3. Welfare Effects of Right to Damages-A Practical Approach and the Swedish Perspective\n 1. Introduction: Welfare-Enhancing Effects \rArising from the Right to Damages\n 2. Welfare Effects of Damages in General\n 3. Welfare Effects of the Right to Damages in Sweden\n 4. Summary\n 4. Challenges for Swedish Courts: Will the New Directive on Competition Damages Actions Help?\n 1. Can We Expect Any Challenges?\n 2. The Starting Point for an Analysis of the Impact \rof the Directive in Sweden\n 3. Will the Directive\'s Procedural Provisions \rGive Claimants Better Incentives?\n 4. Will the Directive Provide Claimants with Better Economic Incentives?\n 5. Collective Redress\n 6. Summary and Conclusions\n 5. The Damages Directive and Other Enforcement Measures in EU Competition Law\n 1. Introduction\n 2. Aims and Measures of Public Enforcement\n 3. Private Enforcement-Aims, Measures and Incentives\n 4. Private Enforcement as a Complement \rto Public Enforcement\n 5. Friction between Public and Private Enforcement\n 6. The Effects of the Damages Directive on the Interplay between Public and Private Enforcement\n 7. Conclusions\nPart II: Private Enforcement and theNew Directive in Context\n 6. Embedding Procedural Autonomy: The Directive and National Procedural Rules\n 1. Introduction\n 2. Private Enforcement and the \'National \rProcedural Autonomy\' Focus\n 3. Embedding Procedural Obligations in the Directive\n 4. Conclusion\n 7. Private Enforcement of \rCompetition Law in Intellectual Property Cases\n 1. Introduction\n 2. Competition Law as a Defence in Intellectual \rProperty Infringement Cases\n 3. The FRAND Debate on Injunctive Relief\n 4. Conclusion\nPart III: Transparency, Leniency Programmes,and Human Rights\n 8. Transparency and Liability in Leniency Programmes: A Question of Balancing?\n 1. Introduction\n 2. The Uncertainty of Leniency and Liability\n 3. Access to Leniency Documents and the \rWeighing of Interests\n 4. Balancing and the Damages Directive\n 5. Concluding Remarks\n 9. Access to Documents for Cartel Victims and Cartel Members-Is the System Coherent?\n 1. Introduction\n 2. Background\n 3. Access to Documents According to the ECJ\n 4. Access to Documents According to the Directive\n 5. Is the System Coherent?\n 6. Conclusions\nPart IV: Private Enforcement ThroughNational Actions\n 10. Practical Private Enforcement: Perspectives from Portugal\n 1. Introduction\n 2. Main Improvements of the Directive \ron Competition Damages Actions\n 3. Antitrust Private Enforcement \rin the Portuguese Context\n 4. Specific Issues\n 5. Conclusions\n 11. Practical Private Enforcement: Perspectives from Poland\n 1. Background\n 2. Insight into the Approach of the Polish Courts\n 3. Why is Private Enforcement not Booming in Poland?\n 4. The Future of Private Enforcement in Poland\n 5. Concluding Remarks\n 12. Practical Private Enforcement: Perspectives from Finland-Causal Links, the Principle of Effectiveness and Requirements for National Solutions\n 1. Introduction\n 2. Causal Links: Governing Law, Evaluation \rand Acceptability of National Approaches\n 3. The Principle of Effectiveness and Outer Limits \rof EU Law Requirements\n 4. Concluding Remarks\n 13. Practical Private Enforcement: Perspectives from Greece and \rthe Netherlands\n 1. Introduction\n 2. A Preliminary Point: The Legal Basis \rof the Right to Damages\n 3. Disclosure of Evidence\n 4. The Binding Effect of National Decisions\n 5. Limitation Periods\n 6. Joint and Several Liability\n 7. Passing-On Defence\n 8. Consensual Dispute Resolution\n 9. Conclusions\nPart V: Harm, Indirect Purchasers, andAlternative Redress\n 14. Indirect Purchasers-Is there Anything New in the Directive? An Introductory Overview of the Current and Future Status of \rIndirect Purchasers in the EU\n 1. Introduction\n 2. The Directive-A Short Background and Overview\n 3. ECJ Case Law on Antitrust Damages\n 4. The US Experience\n 5. The Future Treatment of Indirect Purchasers \rin the EU-Relevant Provisions in the Directive\n 6. Various Categories of Indirect Purchasers\n 7. The Swedish Experience\n 8. Concluding Remarks\n 15. Beyond the Competition Damages Directive: What Room for Competition Law Restitution?\n 1. Introduction\n 2. Why and When is Restitution an Option?\n 3. Exploring the Scope of the Competition \rDamages Directive\n 4. Possibilities and Problems\n 5. Must National Restitutionary Remedies \rbe Made Available?\n 6. Conclusions\n 16. The Presumption and Quantification of Harm in the Directive and the \rPractical Guide\n 1. Introduction\n 2. The Quantification of Harm and the Directive\n 3. The Practical Guide on Quantifying Harm\n 4. Some Interesting Questions Lying Ahead\n 5. Conclusions\nAppendix\nIndex




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