Title
Policy and Methods in German and American Antitrust Law: A Comparative Study
Files
Description
A remarkable reversal in popular satisfaction with antitrust law has occurred: Germany--once the classic land of cartels--now enforces an antitrust law vigorously and subject to little meaningful opposition, while the United States--itself the home of antitrust law--enforces its antitrust law erratically and against significant criticism. Whatever may be the precise measure of support in each country for antitrust laws, even the most cursory observation discloses a criticism of antitrust law in the United States not matched in kind or degree in the Federal Republic of Germany. This work investigates aspects of some of the many possible explanations--legal, social, and economic--for this remarkable turnaround. It considers perhaps the most obvious question: How do the two antitrust laws differ? In partial answer, it suggests that certain principal criticisms of American antitrust law reflect dissatisfaction as much with the legal methods by which that law is applied as with the law itself. German cartel law, Maxeiner suggests, utilizes different legal methods which avoid or mitigate many of the problems encountered in American antitrust law.
ISBN
978-0275921132
Publication Date
5-15-1986
Publisher
Praeger
City
Santa Barbara, CA
Keywords
Germany, legal methods, legal policy, law
Disciplines
Comparative and Foreign Law | International Law | Law
Recommended Citation
Maxeiner, James, "Policy and Methods in German and American Antitrust Law: A Comparative Study" (1986). Books. 42.
https://scholarworks.law.ubalt.edu/fac_books/42