Vol. 135 No. 1 In January of 2021, as the coronavirus pandemic reached its peak in the United States, Alabama Crimson Tide football coach Nick Saban won his...
Earlier this summer, President Biden delivered on a highly anticipated campaign promise to crack down on corporate monopolies and boost competition across the economy....
Vol. 134 No. 7 In racially diverse metropolitan areas throughout the country, school district boundary lines create impermeable borders, separating affluent and predominantly white school districts from low-income,...
Vol. 133 No. 8 Both the United States government and the governments of the fifty states use antitrust principles to regulate firms. A collection of federal statutes, first...
The latest antitrust suit brought by college basketball and football players ended (for now) with a partial victory for the athletes. In a unanimous...
Vol. 133 No. 5 Introduction In April 2007 the Antitrust Modernization Commission reported to Congress that “the state of the U.S. antitrust laws” was “sound.” Created by lawmakers...
Vol. 133 No. 2 Introduction A vigorous debate about the effects and legality of “horizontal shareholding” — when a common set of investors owns significant shares in corporations...
Vol. 133 No. 1 Antitrust standing doctrine has remained in uneasy repose since the Court’s decision in Illinois Brick Co. v. Illinois, over four decades ago. Under Illinois...