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Richard A. Epstein and Michael S. Greve present a series of essays aimed at untangling the problem of antitrust jurisdiction.
Seemingly arcane questions of jurisdiction have emerged as a massive problem in antitrust law. After settling with U.S. state and federal authorities over antitrust allegations, Microsoft was again the target on March 24 when the European Commission fined the company $613 million for monopolistic practices. Just a month later, in...
With fakes of the cancer drug Avastin popping up in U.S. clinics in the past few months, patients are naturally worried about whether their medicines are safe. Considering eighty percent of the ingredients in U.S. medicines come from overseas – mostly from China and India because their products are generally...
Universal jurisdiction has excited many legal theorists and human rights advocates with the promise of bringing to justice more frequently those who commit crimes against humanity.
Most corporate CEOs would be surprised to learn that they have something in common with former Chilean President Augusto Pinochet.
Ambassador Bolton's review of John Fonte's book "Sovereignty vs. Submissions: Will Americans Rule Themselves of be Ruled by Others?"
It is no accident that arrest warrants never seem to be issued for the likes of Kim Jong Il or Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, since the real targets of universal jurisdiction these days are Western nations.
The U.S. is more active on trade policy than it has been in years. President Obama is meeting with Canada and Mexico about new agreements, Congress will hold hearings on changing decades-old trade law, and the federal government will more broadly be bringing several cases before the WTO.
Yet, in constructing...



