Damages Claims for the Infringement of EU Competition Law is the most up-to-date study of private damages actions in the EU. It contains an enriching account of underexplored topics such as causation and jurisdictional questions...[an] advanced introduction to the law and economics of private damages actions with a wise selection of topics that are covered in sufficient depths.

Dr Sebastian Peyer, University of East Anglia, Global Competition Litigation Review

As an advanced introduction to the law and economics of competition damages action in the EU, the volume constitutes a great resource for legal practitioners pioneering the area but equally to students and academics looking for a thorough yet compact discussion of those issues that really matter ... In the brave new world of multi-jurisdictional competition law enforcement characterized by large areas of regulatory space still occupied by national rules, Lianos, Davis and Nebbias book will certainly prove a useful companion to the growing cohort of adventurous spirits engaged in its discovery.

Damien Gerard, Institut de droit de la concurrence

Damages Claims for the Infringement of Competition Law addresses the current state of the law in the EU on damages claims for the infringement of EU competition law by combining a theoretical with a practical perspective. The work first focuses on the relevant EU acquis, examining all aspects of EU law that may be relevant to damages claims (whether brought by a consumer or not) such as those concerning fault, alternative dispute resolution, as well as private international law instruments. The book then delves into the economic underpinnings of claims for damages, including optimal enforcement theory and damages and the legal standards of liability, the evaluation of damages for cartels, exploitative conduct and exclusionary conduct. The work also examines collective actions (legal regime and financing aspects), the interaction between damages claims and public enforcement, causation as well as issues relating to multi-jurisdictional enforcement and damages claims. The book provides a discussion of the emerging field of competion law damages and explores the important questions it raises about the use of the traditional tort law catergories in an area of law that is heavily infused with economic analysis. It combines a corrective justice perspective with an empirical and theoretical analysis of the practice of competiton law damages in various jurisdictions in Europe. Rather than adopting the traditional economic analysis law of approach, the authors respect the autonomy of the fields of law and economics, while attempting to identify the areas of conflict that may emerge when economic concepts and categories are integrated in the legal system.
Les mer
This new book assesses the European framework for enforcement of competition law through private damages claims, setting it within the broader international context of global governance of antitrust.
1. Introduction ; 2. Background and rationale of damages claims ; 3. The directive on actions for damages for infringments of competition law ; 4. The legal hurdle of causation: variations on a theme ; 5. The Interaction of the Legal Concept of Causation with the economic concept of causation ; 6. Evaluating Damages: A Primer ; 7. The interaction between public enforcement and private actions for damages in Europe ; 8. Cross-border damages actions in the EU: Managing Inter-Jurisdictional Competition in the EU Mixed Enforcement System
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`The book is necessary, well written, and provides with a great starting point to whoever is willing to study any topic related to damages claims under EU law in detail.' Luis Ortiz Blanco, José Luis Azofra Parrondo, World Competition 39:1
Les mer
Analyses the development and impact of the current legal framework on damages claims for the infringement of competition law Sets the European framework for enforcement of competition law through private damages claims within the broader international context of global governance of antitrust Examines all aspects of EU law that may be relevant to a damages claim, whether brought by a consumer or otherwise
Les mer
Ioannis Lianos is a Professor in Global Competition Law and Public Policy at University College London; Director of the Centre for Law, Economics and Society, also at UCL and Leading Researcher, HSE-Skolkovo International Laboratory on Law and Development, National Research University- Higher School of Economics. He is the author, contributor and editor of 10 books including Competition and the State (Stanford University press, 2014), Handbook in European Competition Law (Edward Elgar, 2013), The EU After the Treaty of Lisbon (CUP 2012). Ioannis Lianos was awarded the prestigious Philip Leverhulme Prize in 2012 for his influential research on economic evidence. Peter Davis is Executive Vice President at Compass Lexecon, an economic consulting firm. He specialises in advising clients involved in competition and regulatory investigations both strategically and on competition economics and econometrics. Previously, he served as a Deputy Chairman of the UK Competition Commission (now part of the UK's Competition and Markets Authority) and is a former President of the Association of Competition Economics. He read for his PhD in Economics at Yale University and then served on the faculty of MIT Sloan and then in LSE's economics department. He currently serves as a visiting professor at the Faculty of Laws, UCL. He has published widely and is the co-author of the leading competition economics textbook Quantitative Analysis for Competition and Antitrust Investigations (Princeton University Press 2010) which was developed in conjunction with DG Competition. Paolisa Nebbia currently works for DG Competition at the European Commission, having previously worked at the Italian Competition Authority. Prior to that, she was a Reader in Competition Law at the University of Leicester and a Fellow in Law at St Hilda's College, University of Oxford. She has published several articles and books on competition law, as well as EU law, consumer law and comparative contract law. Since 2005, she has been a visiting professor of Antitrust Law at the WIPO Academy. She is also a co-author of EU Consumer Law (OUP 2004).
Les mer
Analyses the development and impact of the current legal framework on damages claims for the infringement of competition law Sets the European framework for enforcement of competition law through private damages claims within the broader international context of global governance of antitrust Examines all aspects of EU law that may be relevant to a damages claim, whether brought by a consumer or otherwise
Les mer

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780199575183
Publisert
2015
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press
Vekt
848 gr
Høyde
249 mm
Bredde
181 mm
Dybde
28 mm
Aldersnivå
UP, P, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
412

Biographical note

Ioannis Lianos is a Professor in Global Competition Law and Public Policy at University College London; Director of the Centre for Law, Economics and Society, also at UCL and Leading Researcher, HSE-Skolkovo International Laboratory on Law and Development, National Research University- Higher School of Economics. He is the author, contributor and editor of 10 books including Competition and the State (Stanford University press, 2014), Handbook in European Competition Law (Edward Elgar, 2013), The EU After the Treaty of Lisbon (CUP 2012). Ioannis Lianos was awarded the prestigious Philip Leverhulme Prize in 2012 for his influential research on economic evidence. Peter Davis is Executive Vice President at Compass Lexecon, an economic consulting firm. He specialises in advising clients involved in competition and regulatory investigations both strategically and on competition economics and econometrics. Previously, he served as a Deputy Chairman of the UK Competition Commission (now part of the UK's Competition and Markets Authority) and is a former President of the Association of Competition Economics. He read for his PhD in Economics at Yale University and then served on the faculty of MIT Sloan and then in LSE's economics department. He currently serves as a visiting professor at the Faculty of Laws, UCL. He has published widely and is the co-author of the leading competition economics textbook Quantitative Analysis for Competition and Antitrust Investigations (Princeton University Press 2010) which was developed in conjunction with DG Competition. Paolisa Nebbia currently works for DG Competition at the European Commission, having previously worked at the Italian Competition Authority. Prior to that, she was a Reader in Competition Law at the University of Leicester and a Fellow in Law at St Hilda's College, University of Oxford. She has published several articles and books on competition law, as well as EU law, consumer law and comparative contract law. Since 2005, she has been a visiting professor of Antitrust Law at the WIPO Academy. She is also a co-author of EU Consumer Law (OUP 2004).