TY - BOOK AU - Hüschelrath,Kai AU - Schweitzer,Heike ED - SpringerLink (Online service) TI - Public and Private Enforcement of Competition Law in Europe: Legal and Economic Perspectives T2 - ZEW Economic Studies, SN - 9783662439753 AV - HB73 U1 - 330 23 PY - 2014/// CY - Berlin, Heidelberg PB - Springer Berlin Heidelberg, Imprint: Springer KW - Economics KW - Europe KW - Economic policy KW - Industrial organization (Economic theory) KW - Commercial law KW - Economics/Management Science KW - Law and Economics KW - International Economic Law, Trade Law KW - Industrial Organization KW - Private International Law, International & Foreign Law, Comparative Law KW - European Integration N1 - Public and Private Enforcement of Competition Law in Europe - Introduction and Overview -- Public Enforcement of Anti-Cartel Laws - Theory and Empirical Evidence -- Leniency Programmes and the Structure of Cartels - Remarks from an Economic Perspective -- The Role of Fines in the Public Enforcement of Competition Law -- The Interaction of Public and Private Antitrust Enforcement - The Calculation of Fines and Damages -- The Interaction of Public and Private Enforcement - The Calculation and Reconciliation of Fines and Damages in Europe and Germany -- Disgorgement and Private Enforcement as Mitigating Circumstances for the Determination of Fines in Antitrust Law -- Quantifying Antitrust Damages - Economics and the Law -- Best Practices for Expert Economic Opinions - Key Element of Forensic Economics in Competition Law -- Access to Evidence and Presumptions - Communicating Vessels in Procedural Law -- Economic Evidence in Competition Litigation in Germany -- Private Damage Claims - Recent Developments in the Passing-on Defence -- Competition Law Enforcement in England and Wales N2 - Over the past fifteen years, the optimal enforcement of EU competition law has become a major concern. This book contains a unique collection of articles by lawyers and economists on current issues in the public and private enforcement of competition law. Public enforcement has been strengthened in numerous ways – for example, through the introduction of a leniency programme and a substantial increase in fines for competition law violations. At the same time the EU Commission has been promoting private enforcement – for example, by developing a legal framework that grants victims of EU antitrust law infringements access to compensation. The contributions in this book address a range of topics in the area of competition law enforcement, including the role of fines and leniency programmes in public enforcement; access to evidence and the quantification of damages in private enforcement; and the interaction between public and private enforcement of competition law in Europe UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-43975-3 ER -