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The ‘Modernisation’ of European Community Competition Law: Achieving Consistency in Enforcement – Part IIDavid GerberIllinois Institute of Technology - Chicago-Kent College of Law Paolo CassinisGovernment of the Italian Republic (Italy) - Italian Competition Authority February 1, 2006 European Competition Law Review, Vol. 27, No. 2, 2006 Abstract: EC Council Regulation 1/2003 established a fundamentally new system for enforcing competition law in Europe. Under the Regulation, the European Commission relinquished its role as primary enforcement mechanism for the competition law provisions of arts. The Regulation placed Member State institutions – administrative agencies and courts – at the center of the enforcement process together with the Commission, and it promoted a wider and more active participation of antitrust institutions and civil courts of Member States (the so-called “decentralisation”). Critical to the success of this project is the capacity of the new system to achieve an acceptable degree of consistency in the application of Community competition law throughout the European Union. This is part two of a two-part article that analyzes the mechanisms that the new system employs for promoting and maintaining enforcement consistency in the interpretation and application of Community competition law and makes some preliminary evaluations on their functioning.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 8 Keywords: antitrust law, competition law, civil courts, Europe Accepted Paper SeriesDate posted: July 23, 2010Suggested CitationContact Information
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