
Intersections Between Corporate and Antitrust Law
Cambridge University Press
Published on 8. June 2023
Book
Hardback
354 pages
978-1-108-84187-0 (ISBN)
Description
Recent public debate on common ownership by institutional investors has brought awareness to one of the many intersections between the corporate and antitrust worlds. But the interplay between these two fields dates back to the dawn of US antitrust. This volume shines a light on the often underplayed and misunderstood connections between antitrust and corporate law and finance. It offers a multi-disciplinary perspective on highly trending issues, such as parallel equity holdings, interlocking directorships, the anticompetitive effects of certain corporate governance arrangements, and the relationships between ESG and not-for profit activities with antitrust law. This edited collection brings together leading experts from across the US, Europe, and Asia and provides a cross-border perspective on alternative policy approaches for the field. This book is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core.
Reviews / Votes
'... the 16 chapters provide numerous instructive insights, many of which - despite the national character of the case studies - are of a cross-national nature.' Jacob Kornbeck, Osterreichische Zeitschrift fiir KartellrechtMore details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Cambridge
United Kingdom
Target group
College/higher education
Product notice
sewn/stitched
Cloth over boards
Illustrations
Worked examples or Exercises
Dimensions
Height: 231 mm
Width: 159 mm
Thickness: 25 mm
Weight
626 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-108-84187-0 (9781108841870)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Marco Corradi | Julian Nowag
Intersections Between Corporate and Antitrust Law
E-Book
05/2023
Cambridge University Press
€125.99
Available for download
Persons
Editor
ESSEC Business School Paris and Singapore
Lunds Universitet, Sweden
Content
Introduction; Part I. The Object and Purpose of Corporations: 1. Corporate law, antitrust, and the history of democratic control of the balance of power, Michelle Meager (University College London); 2. ESG policies at the intersection between competition and corporate law, Marco Corradi and Julian Nowag (Lund University); 3. Not for profit organisations and competition law, Okeoghene Odudu (Cambridge University); Part II. The Boundaries of the Corporation: 4. The boundaries of the firm and the reach of competition law: corporate group liability and sanctioning in the EU and the US, Carsten Koenig (University of Collogne); 5. Piercing the corporate veil: the German sausage saga, Mareike Walter and Martin Schunke (Hogan Lovells); 6. Chaebol regulation in korea and the relationship between competition and company law, Myungsu Hong (Myongji University); Part III. The Governance of Corporations: 7. Antitrust by interior means, Ramsi Woodcock (University of Kentucky); 8. Directors' duty of loyalty: and competition, Marco Corradi (EESEC) and Julian Nowag (Lund University); Part IV. Beyond the Boundaries of the Corporation: 9. Horizontal directors in the US revisited, Yaron Nili (University of Wisconsin); 10. Interlocking directorates in Europe - an enforcement gap? Florence Thepot (University of Glasgow); 11. The curious case of Italian interlocking directorates, Federico Ghezzi and Chiara Picciau (Bocconi Business School); 12. Conceptual breakthroughs on common ownership and competition: a framework for evaluating policy Martin Schmalz (Oxford University); 13. Does common ownership explain higher oligopolistic profits?, Edward Rock and Daniel Rubinfeld (New York University); 14. Common ownership by investment management corporations and eu policies: please, play puzzles and not mikado!, Marco Corradi (ESSEC); 15. Common ownership and minority shareholding at the intersection of competition and corporate law: looking through the past to return to the future?, Anna Tzanaki (Lund University); 16. Competition law, big tech and financialisation: the dark side of the moon, Ioannis Lianos and Andrew McLean (University College London).