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The rise of digital platforms and technology has hastened a debate about the regulation of corporate power in the United States. This book is for legislators, antitrust enforcers, private lawyers, and academics interested in questions of how best to reform our antitrust laws to address contemporary challenges.
About the author
Alan J. Devlin is a partner with Latham & Watkins LLP and was Acting Deputy Director of the FTC's Bureau of Competition. He is also Adjunct Professor at Georgetown University Law Center. His publications include Antitrust & Patent Law, Principles of Law & Economics, and over thirty articles published at Stanford, Harvard, Yale, Berkeley, Northwestern, and elsewhere.
Summary
The rise of digital platforms and technology has hastened a debate about the regulation of corporate power in the United States. This book is for legislators, antitrust enforcers, private lawyers, and academics interested in questions of how best to reform our antitrust laws to address contemporary challenges.
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'Well-written and engaging even to the lay reader, this new volume is a must-read for anyone interested in antitrust reform. Devlin charts a careful middle course between our current weakened system of antitrust enforcement and the calls for radical reform coming from many quarters today. This is a book with the potential to make the world a better place.' Mark A. Lemley, Stanford Law School