Understanding how and why the U.S. Competition law system is decentralized

U.S. competition (antitrust) authority is decentralized, unlike that of most countries. Private parties, state agencies, and two federal agencies enforce competition law at both the state and federal level. Private and federal enforcement was a deliberate congressional decision, while power shared b...

Descripción completa

Guardado en:
Detalles bibliográficos
Autor principal: Roulusonis, Robert
Formato: Artículo
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: 2015
Acceso en línea:https://dialnet.unirioja.es/servlet/oaiart?codigo=5171982
Fuente:Estudios de Deusto: revista de la Universidad de Deusto, ISSN 0423-4847, Vol. 63, Nº. 1, 2015, pags. 157-168
Etiquetas: Añadir etiqueta
Sin etiquetas: Sea el primero en etiquetar este registro
id
dialnet-ar-18-ART0001323193
record_format
dialnet
spelling
dialnet-ar-18-ART00013231932019-05-22Understanding how and why the U.S. Competition law system is decentralizedRoulusonis, RobertU.S. competition (antitrust) authority is decentralized, unlike that of most countries. Private parties, state agencies, and two federal agencies enforce competition law at both the state and federal level. Private and federal enforcement was a deliberate congressional decision, while power shared between state and federal government is natural in a federalist system. The federal government decentralization however, is more a consequence of judicial and legislative history than intent. The purpose of this essay is to explain to international law agencies how and why the U.S. competition law system is decentralized. It will cover the nature of state, federal, and private party enforcement of competition lawLa autoridad de competencia (antitrust) estadounidense está descentralizada, a diferencia de la mayoría de los países. Los particulares, las agencias estatales, y dos agencias federales hacen cumplir la ley de competencia tanto en el nivel estatal como federal. La ejecución privada y federal era una decisión deliberada por el Congreso, mientras el poder compartido entre el gobierno estatal y federal es natural en un sistema federalista. Sin embargo, la descentralización del gobierno federal es más una consecuencia de la historia judicial y legislativa que una intención. El objetivo de este trabajo es explicar a las agencias legales internacionales cómo y por qué el sistema estadounidense de derecho de la competencia está descentralizado. Ello cubrirá la naturaleza de los agentes estatales, federales y privados en la ejecución del derecho de la competencia.2015text (article)application/pdfhttps://dialnet.unirioja.es/servlet/oaiart?codigo=5171982(Revista) ISSN 0423-4847Estudios de Deusto: revista de la Universidad de Deusto, ISSN 0423-4847, Vol. 63, Nº. 1, 2015, pags. 157-168engLICENCIA DE USO: Los documentos a texto completo incluidos en Dialnet son de acceso libre y propiedad de sus autores y/o editores. Por tanto, cualquier acto de reproducción, distribución, comunicación pública y/o transformación total o parcial requiere el consentimiento expreso y escrito de aquéllos. Cualquier enlace al texto completo de estos documentos deberá hacerse a través de la URL oficial de éstos en Dialnet. Más información: https://dialnet.unirioja.es/info/derechosOAI | INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS STATEMENT: Full text documents hosted by Dialnet are protected by copyright and/or related rights. This digital object is accessible without charge, but its use is subject to the licensing conditions set by its authors or editors. Unless expressly stated otherwise in the licensing conditions, you are free to linking, browsing, printing and making a copy for your own personal purposes. All other acts of reproduction and communication to the public are subject to the licensing conditions expressed by editors and authors and require consent from them. Any link to this document should be made using its official URL in Dialnet. More info: https://dialnet.unirioja.es/info/derechosOAI
institution
Dialnet
collection
Dialnet AR
source
Estudios de Deusto: revista de la Universidad de Deusto, ISSN 0423-4847, Vol. 63, Nº. 1, 2015, pags. 157-168
language
English
description
U.S. competition (antitrust) authority is decentralized, unlike that of most countries. Private parties, state agencies, and two federal agencies enforce competition law at both the state and federal level. Private and federal enforcement was a deliberate congressional decision, while power shared between state and federal government is natural in a federalist system. The federal government decentralization however, is more a consequence of judicial and legislative history than intent. The purpose of this essay is to explain to international law agencies how and why the U.S. competition law system is decentralized. It will cover the nature of state, federal, and private party enforcement of competition law
format
Article
author
Roulusonis, Robert
spellingShingle
Roulusonis, Robert
Understanding how and why the U.S. Competition law system is decentralized
author_facet
Roulusonis, Robert
author_sort
Roulusonis, Robert
title
Understanding how and why the U.S. Competition law system is decentralized
title_short
Understanding how and why the U.S. Competition law system is decentralized
title_full
Understanding how and why the U.S. Competition law system is decentralized
title_fullStr
Understanding how and why the U.S. Competition law system is decentralized
title_full_unstemmed
Understanding how and why the U.S. Competition law system is decentralized
title_sort
understanding how and why the u.s. competition law system is decentralized
publishDate
2015
url
https://dialnet.unirioja.es/servlet/oaiart?codigo=5171982
_version_
1709750837070266368