Compatibility of Transactional Resolutions of Antitrust Proceedings with Due Process and Fundamental Rights & Online Exhaustion of IP Rights / edited by Bruce Kilpatrick, Pierre Kobel, Pranvera Këllezi.
2016
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Title
Compatibility of Transactional Resolutions of Antitrust Proceedings with Due Process and Fundamental Rights & Online Exhaustion of IP Rights / edited by Bruce Kilpatrick, Pierre Kobel, Pranvera Këllezi.
Added Corporate Author
Edition
1st ed. 2016.
Imprint
Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Springer, 2016.
Description
XIII, 679 p. online resource.
Series
LIDC contributions on antitrust law, intellectual property and unfair competition. 2199-742X
Formatted Contents Note
Part I - Due Process in Antitrust Transactional Mechanisms: Pranvera Këllezi, International Report
Barbora Jedličková, Julie Clarke and Sitesh Bhojani, Australia
Gerhard Fussenegger, Austria
Jenna Auwerx, Belgium
José Carlos da Matta Berardo, Bruno B. Becker, Brazil
Jiří Kindl and Michal Petr, Czech Republic
David Bosco, France
Eckart Bueren, Germany
Anikó Keller, Hungary
Alberto Camusso, Italy
Aleksander Stawicki, Bartosz Turno, Tomasz Feliszewski, Krzysztof Kanton and Katarzyna Karasiewicz, Poland
Darija Ognjenovic, Serbia
Julia Suderow and Amaya Angulo Garzaro, Spain
Helene Andersson, Sweden
Daniel Emch, David Neuenschwander and Alisa Burkhard, Switzerland
Marc Israel, United Kingdom
Emilio E. Varanini, United States of America
Part II - Online Exhaustion of IP Rights: Vincenzo Franceschelli, International Report
Max W. Mosing, Austria
Jan Clinck and Benjamin Docquir, Belgium
Paulo Parente Marques Mendes, Brazil
Teodora Tsenova, Bulgaria
Karin Pomaizlova, Czech Republic
Mary-Claude Mitchell, Jean-Louis Fourgoux, Rachel Nakache and Tiphaine Delannoy, France
Thomas Hoeren, Germany
Zsófia Lendvai, Hungary
Francesca La Rocca, Italy
Adrien Alberini, Switzerland
Bill Batchelor and Luca Montani, United Kingdom. .
Barbora Jedličková, Julie Clarke and Sitesh Bhojani, Australia
Gerhard Fussenegger, Austria
Jenna Auwerx, Belgium
José Carlos da Matta Berardo, Bruno B. Becker, Brazil
Jiří Kindl and Michal Petr, Czech Republic
David Bosco, France
Eckart Bueren, Germany
Anikó Keller, Hungary
Alberto Camusso, Italy
Aleksander Stawicki, Bartosz Turno, Tomasz Feliszewski, Krzysztof Kanton and Katarzyna Karasiewicz, Poland
Darija Ognjenovic, Serbia
Julia Suderow and Amaya Angulo Garzaro, Spain
Helene Andersson, Sweden
Daniel Emch, David Neuenschwander and Alisa Burkhard, Switzerland
Marc Israel, United Kingdom
Emilio E. Varanini, United States of America
Part II - Online Exhaustion of IP Rights: Vincenzo Franceschelli, International Report
Max W. Mosing, Austria
Jan Clinck and Benjamin Docquir, Belgium
Paulo Parente Marques Mendes, Brazil
Teodora Tsenova, Bulgaria
Karin Pomaizlova, Czech Republic
Mary-Claude Mitchell, Jean-Louis Fourgoux, Rachel Nakache and Tiphaine Delannoy, France
Thomas Hoeren, Germany
Zsófia Lendvai, Hungary
Francesca La Rocca, Italy
Adrien Alberini, Switzerland
Bill Batchelor and Luca Montani, United Kingdom. .
Summary
This book provides an unparalleled comparative analysis of two "hot topics" in the field of antitrust and unfair competition laws with regard to a number of key countries. The first part of the book examines the consistency and compatibility of transactional resolutions of antitrust proceedings (such as settlement procedures, leniency programmes and commitments) with due process and the fundamental rights of the parties. This is a particularly important topic, given the widespread adoption of these procedures by anti-trust authorities worldwide. The individual chapters consider how the leniency, settlement and commitments procedures have developed across a range of jurisdictions, and discuss the extent to which checks and balances have been applied in those national procedures in order to safeguard the fundamental rights of the parties involved. A detailed international report identifies general trends and highlights the differences between and most interesting features of national regulations. The second part of the book gathers contributions from various jurisdictions on the unfair competition-related question of the online exhaustion of IP rights. As commerce is increasingly moving online, the respective chapters consider the extent to which exhaustion and similar concepts have adapted to these rapid changes. The comprehensive and insightful international report brings together these reflections by comparing various national positions. The book also includes the resolutions passed by the General Assembly of the LIDC following a debate on each of these topics, which include proposed solutions and recommendations. The international League of Competition Law (LIDC) is a long-standing international association that focuses on the interface between competition law and intellectual property law, including unfair competition issues.
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SpringerLink electronic monographs.
Language
English
ISBN
9783319271583
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