Product details
- Categories: Competition Law
- Publisher: HART PUBLISHING
- Collection: Hart Studies in Competition Law
- ISBN: 9781509935413
- Publication Date: 17/09/2020
- Binding: Paperback
- Number of pages: 192
- Language: English
Summary
What constitutes a fair procedure when it comes to EU competition law?
This
innovative book seeks to understand the philosophical considerations at
the core of conflicting procedural fairness arguments in EU competition
law practice. The author argues for a conceptualisation of procedural
fairness as a distributional issue that can be solved by a practical
fairness theory and a comprehensive methodology. To illustrate the
usefulness of the conceptualisation, three procedural fairness problems
from recent EU competition law practice are analysed:
- the KME–Chalkor cases;
- the Groupe Gascogne cases;
- the regulatory question about using a collective redress mechanism for private enforcement of EU competition law.
This
unique approach provides a robust philosophical and methodological
foundation for arguing about a wide range of procedural fairness
dilemmas. The book is a must-read for academics and practitioners
seeking an imaginative perspective on the philosophical foundations of
arguments about procedural fairness in EU competition law and beyond.
Table of contents
I. Procedural Fairness in EU Competition Law
A. The KME/Chalkor Argument
B. The Elements of KME/Chalkor Dilemma
C. The KME/Chalkor Dilemma in Context
II. Towards a Conceptualisation of Procedural Fairness
2. The Essence of a Procedure
I. Differentiating Procedural Law and Substantive Law
II. Procedures as a Social Institution
III. The Institutional Elements of an Adjudicative Procedure
A. Instrumental Structure
i. Constitutive Rules
ii. Culture
iii. Sanctions
B. Normative Function
i. The Deontological View
ii. The Consequential View
iii. The Functional Essence of a Procedure
IV. Towards a Conceptualisation of a Fair Adjudicative Procedure
3. The Structure and Function of EU Competition Procedures
I. The Normative Purpose of EU Competition Law
II. Stakeholders and Stakes in Competition Proceedings
A. The Main Stakeholders
B. The Main Stakes
III. The Structure of the EU's Competition Law Procedure
IV. Instrumental Structure and Normative Function
A. The Constitutive Rules of EU Competition Law Procedure
B. The Institutional Culture of DG Competition
C. The Procedure before the CJEU
D. Institutional Sanctions
V. Arguments about Procedural Fairness in EU Competition Law
4. Ethics for Procedural Architects
I. Ethics and Legal Theory
II. Ethics beyond Legal Theory
A. The Social Contract Narrative
B. Hobbesian Ethics and Game Theory
C. Contractarian Ethics and Democratic Institutions
III. Ethics as the Dark Matter of the Law
5. The Model of Fair Rules
I. The Role of the Rule Architect
II. Rulemaking as a Decision Problem
III. The Elements of the Model of Fair Rules
A. The Policy Objective of a Rule
B. Unifi cation of Moral and Efficiency Claims
C. Interpersonal Comparison of Stakeholder Claims
D. Registration of Preferences into Pay-off Matrices
E. Identifying Fair and Efficient Rules
IV. The Utility of a Model for Identifying Fair Rules
6. Analysis of Three Fairness Dilemmas
I. The KME/Chalkor Cases
A. Analysis of the Cases
B. Subsequent Developments
C. The Court's Approach to the Fairness Issue
II. The Groupe Gascogne Cases
A. Analysis of the Cases
B. The Court's Approach to the Fairness Issue
III. Collective Redress for Private Enforcement of Competition Law
A. Analysis of the Legislative Dilemma
B. The Commission's Approach to the Fairness Issue
IV. Symptoms of an Underdeveloped Theory of Procedural Fairness
7. An Argument for a Data-based Democracy
I. Conceptualisation of Procedural Fairness in EU Competition Law
II. Solving Fairness Issues in EU Competition Procedure
A. Applying the Model of Fair Rules
i. Step 1: Identifying the Primary Policy Objective
ii. Step 2: Preference Function
iii. Step 3: Preference Index
iv. Step 4: Preference Matrices
v. Step 5: Identifying Fairness
B. Assessing the Utility of the Model
III. Technocracy and the Making of Laws
IV. Data-based Democracy for Regulating EU Competition Procedure