Fr. 226.80

Criminalization of European Cartel Enforcement - Theoretical, Legal, and Practical Challenges

English · Hardback

Shipping usually within 1 to 3 weeks (not available at short notice)

Description

Read more










The challenges facing the criminalization of cartel activity in the EU are threefold: theoretical, legal, and practical. This book analyses these crucial challenges so that the complexity of the process of European antitrust criminalization can be accurately understood.

List of contents










  • 1: An Introduction to European Antitrust Criminalization and Its Theoretical, Legal, and Practical Challenges

  • Part I: Theoretical Challenges

  • 2: Potential Theoretical Justifications for European Antitrust Criminalization

  • 3: European Antitrust Criminalization and the Challenge of Deterrence Theory

  • 4: European Antitrust Criminalization and the Challenge of Retribution Theory

  • Part II: Legal Challenges

  • 5: European Antitrust Criminalization and the First Challenge of Due Process: A 'Strengthening of Rights' in Favour of the Accused?

  • 6: European Antitrust Criminalization and the Second Challenge of Due Process: Imposing Criminal Sanctions Alongside Civil Sanctions

  • 7: European Antitrust Criminalization and the Challenge of Legal Certainty

  • Part III: Practical Challenges

  • 8: European Antitrust Criminalization and the First Challenge of Design - Defining the Criminal Cartel Offence

  • 9: European Antitrust Criminalization and the Second Challenge of Design - Understanding the Complexities of Leniency/Immunity

  • 10: European Antitrust Criminalization and the Third Challenge of Design - Identifying the Desirable Enforcement Strategies

  • Conclusion

  • 11: Concluding Remarks on the Theoretical, Legal and Practical Challenges of European Antitrust Criminalization

  • Annexes

  • Annex I: Text of Article 101 TFEU

  • Annex II: Text of the (Original) UK Cartel Offence and Section 47 of the Enterprise and Regulatory Reform Act 2013

  • Annex III: Diagrammatical Representation of the Social Harm Due to Cartel Activity

  • Bibliography



About the author

Dr Peter Whelan is an Associate Professor in Law at the School of Law, University of Leeds, where he is the Deputy Director of the Centre for Criminal Justice Studies. He has degrees in law from Trinity College Dublin and a PhD in Law from St John's College, University of Cambridge. A qualified US Attorney-at-Law, Peter is an expert in competition law and sits on the Editorial Boards of World Competition and the Journal of Antitrust Enforcement. Peter has published widely in specialist competition law journals, as well as in generalist law journals (including Oxford Journal of Legal Studies, Cambridge Law Journal and Modern Law Review). He has provided oral evidence on cartel criminalization to the New Zealand Parliament and was recently appointed as an International Expert by the Finnish Competition and Consumer Authority to advise it on the desirability of introducing criminal cartel sanctions in Finland. Peter is also the Managing Editor of Oxford Competition Law.

Summary

Cartel activity is prohibited under EU law by virtue of Article 101(1) of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union. Firms that violate this provision face severe punishment from those entities responsible for enforcing EU competition law: the European Commission, the national competition authorities, and the national courts. Stiff fines are regularly imposed on firms by these entities; such firm-focused punishment is an established feature of the antitrust enforcement landscape within the EU. In recent years, however, focus has also been placed on the individuals within the firms responsible for the cartel activity. It is increasingly recognized that punishment for cartel activity should be individual-focused as well as firm-focused. Accordingly, a growing tendency to criminalize cartel activity can be observed in the EU Member States.

The existence of such criminal sanctions within the EU presents a number of crucial challenges that need to be met if the underlying enforcement objectives are to be achieved in practice without violating prevailing legal norms. For a start, given the severe consequences of a custodial sentence, the employment of criminal antitrust punishment must be justifiable in principle: one must have a robust normative framework rationalizing the existence of criminal cartel sanctions. Second, for it to be legitimate, antitrust criminalization should only occur in a manner that respects the mandatory legalities applicable to the European jurisdiction in question. These include the due process rights of the accused and the principle of legal certainty. Finally, the correct practical measures (such as a criminal leniency policy and a correctly defined criminal cartel offence) need to be in place in order to ensure that the employment of criminal antitrust punishment actually achieves its aims while maintaining its legitimacy.

These three particular challenges can be conceptualized respectively as the theoretical, legal, and practical challenges of European antitrust criminalization. This book analyses these three crucial challenges so that the complexity of the process of European antitrust criminalization can be understood more accurately. In doing so, this book acknowledges that the three challenges should not be considered in isolation. In fact there is a dynamic relationship between the theoretical, legal, and practical challenges of European antitrust criminalization and an effective antitrust criminalization policy is one which recognizes and respects this complex interaction.

Additional text

The existing and potential sanctions within the EU designed to deter, or punish those who set up cartels form the basis of this rigorous and analytical study by Dr Peter Whelan published by the Oxford University Press...Whelan has therefore set himself the formidable task of addressing and examining what he refers to as the theoretical, legal and practical challenges of European antitrust criminalization, which he, stresses should be examined and analysed not separately, but as a dynamic whole. ...Whelan has certainly shed much light on a complex, often awkward and continually evolving subject, which is also fraught with implications for corporate responsibility in general. Lawyers as well as academics and policy makers will welcome the important contribution made by this book to the ongoing debate on cartels within the EU.

Product details

Authors Peter Whelan, Peter (Associate Professor in Law Whelan
Publisher Oxford University Press
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 07.08.2014
 
EAN 9780199670062
ISBN 978-0-19-967006-2
No. of pages 400
Series Oxford Studies in European Law
Oxford Studies in European Law
Subject Social sciences, law, business > Law > Mercantile and commercial law

Customer reviews

No reviews have been written for this item yet. Write the first review and be helpful to other users when they decide on a purchase.

Write a review

Thumbs up or thumbs down? Write your own review.

For messages to CeDe.ch please use the contact form.

The input fields marked * are obligatory

By submitting this form you agree to our data privacy statement.