|
![]() |
|||
|
||||
OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Mel Marquis , Roberto CisottaPublisher: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Imprint: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Dimensions: Width: 15.60cm , Height: 2.40cm , Length: 23.40cm Weight: 0.606kg ISBN: 9781783478859ISBN 10: 1783478853 Pages: 328 Publication Date: 27 March 2015 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviews'The contributions in this collection comprehensively review key issues concerning the respective roles of national and EU courts in enforcing competition and state aid law, and the relationship between court and arbitration proceedings in those fields. This groundbreaking work provides a stimulating and up-to-date analysis of the EU's decentralized enforcement system and I strongly recommend it to both scholars and practitioners. It will assist them in promoting the proper application of competition law in that institutionally complex and multi-level environment.' -- Judge Jose Luis da Cruz Vilaca, The Court of Justice of the European Union, Luxembourg 'This is a comprehensive compendium of perceptive and insightful articles by highly experienced lawyers, arbitrators and academics. The most important issues arising in connection with arbitration, litigation and EU competition law are explored from both practical and theoretical perspectives. The Commission's Antitrust Damages Directive and the movement toward collective actions and multiple jurisdictional enforcement are analyzed, as well as timely questions about evidence and judicial review. The legally and politically complex subject of state aids is brilliantly treated. Finally, issues arising when EU competition law comes before arbitrators are discussed in great depth by seasoned participants in international arbitration.' -- Barry Hawk, Fordham University, US 'Academics and practitioners, judges and arbitrators alike, will find this compendium of scholarly research an invaluable addition to the existing research materials currently available on the often vexed issues, past and present that have emerged in the field of EU competition law.' -- Phillip and Elizabeth Taylor, The Barrister Magazine 'The contributions in this collection comprehensively review key issues concerning the respective roles of national and EU courts in enforcing competition and state aid law, and the relationship between court and arbitration proceedings in those fields. This groundbreaking work provides a stimulating and up-to-date analysis of the EU's decentralized enforcement system and I strongly recommend it to both scholars and practitioners. It will assist them in promoting the proper application of competition law in that institutionally complex and multi-level environment.' -- Judge Jose Luis da Cruz Vilaca, The Court of Justice of the European Union, Luxembourg 'This is a comprehensive compendium of perceptive and insightful articles by highly experienced lawyers, arbitrators and academics. The most important issues arising in connection with arbitration, litigation and EU competition law are explored from both practical and theoretical perspectives. The Commission's Antitrust Damages Directive and the movement toward collective actions and multiple jurisdictional enforcement are analyzed, as well as timely questions about evidence and judicial review. The legally and politically complex subject of state aids is brilliantly treated. Finally, issues arising when EU competition law comes before arbitrators are discussed in great depth by seasoned participants in international arbitration.' -- Barry Hawk, Fordham University, US 'Overall this book marks a significant addition to the burgeoning private enforcement literature, but it is in its focus on arbitration that it is novel, important and particularly enlightening, emphasizing in particular the increasing role of arbitration in the competition law enforcement architecture. The book is a contemporary account of the ever-widening scope and context of EU private enforcement and is recommended reading for anyone interested in the interplay between national legal procedural systems, enforcement of EU (competition law) rights and the role of the Commission and Court of Justice of in facilitating and harmonizing their effective enforcement.' -- Professor Barry J. Rodger, World Competition 'Academics and practitioners, judges and arbitrators alike, will find this compendium of scholarly research an invaluable addition to the existing research materials currently available on the often vexed issues, past and present that have emerged in the field of EU competition law.' -- Phillip and Elizabeth Taylor, The Barrister Magazine 'This is a comprehensive compendium of perceptive and insightful articles by highly experienced lawyers, arbitrators and academics. The most important issues arising in connection with arbitration, litigation and EU competition law are explored from both practical and theoretical perspectives. The Commission's Antitrust Damages Directive and the movement toward collective actions and multiple jurisdictional enforcement are analyzed, as well as timely questions about evidence and judicial review. The legally and politically complex subject of state aids is brilliantly treated. Finally, issues arising when EU competition law comes before arbitrators are discussed in great depth by seasoned participants in international arbitration.' --Barry Hawk, Fordham University, US'Overall this book marks a significant addition to the burgeoning private enforcement literature, but it is in its focus on arbitration that it is novel, important and particularly enlightening, emphasizing in particular the increasing role of arbitration in the competition law enforcement architecture. The book is a contemporary account of the ever-widening scope and context of EU private enforcement and is recommended reading for anyone interested in the interplay between national legal procedural systems, enforcement of EU (competition law) rights and the role of the Commission and Court of Justice of in facilitating and harmonizing their effective enforcement.' --Professor Barry J. Rodger, World Competition 'Academics and practitioners, judges and arbitrators alike, will find this compendium of scholarly research an invaluable addition to the existing research materials currently available on the often vexed issues, past and present that have emerged in the field of EU competition law.' --Phillip and Elizabeth Taylor, The Barrister Magazine Author InformationEdited by Mel Marquis, Faculty of Law, Monash University, Australia and Roberto Cisotta, Associate Professor of EU Law, La Sapienza University, Italy Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |