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New England Law Review Editorial Board 1998-1999
New England Law Review Editorial Board 1999-2000
VOLUME 34
FALL 1999
NUMBER 1
CONTENTS
Symposium: Competing Competition Laws:
Do We Need a Global Standard?
Foreword
Thomas C. Fischer
Michael P. Scharf
Welcoming Remarks
Dean John F. O'Brien
Opening Remarks
Thomas C. Fischer
Introduction: Tensions Between National Laws and Global Trade
Global Problems in a World of National Law
Eleanor M. Fox
Panel One: Different Anti-Competitive Visions in the Western World: The U.S. and the EU
Some Reflections on Competition Law in the Global Market
Honorable Christopher Bellamy
A View from the United Kingdom
David Vaughan Q.C.
Globalization's Effect on Antitrust Law
Russell J. Weintraub
What Business People Want From A World Antitrust Code
Joseph P. Griffin
Panel Two: A Wider World: Other Anti-Competitive Activities and Visions
The Trade Embargo as an International Political Instrument
Harold G. Maier
Fostering Competition in Financial Services: From Domestic Supervision to Global Standards
Thomas C. Baxter, Jr.
James H. Freis, Jr.
A WTO Perspective on Private Anti-Competitive Behavior in World Markets
Robert E. Hudec
Luncheon Speech
Is Cooperation Possible?
Honorable Diane P. Wood
Panel Three: Is Reconciliation Possible?
Reasons For Skepticism
Don Wallace, Jr.
The U.S.-European Conflict Over the Globalization of Antitrust Law: A Legal Experience Perspective
David J. Gerber
Legal, Economic and Political Objectives of National and International Competition Policies: Constitutional Functions of WTO "Linking Principles" for Trade and Competition
Ernst-Ulrich Petersmann
An International Common Law of Antitrust
Spencer Weber Waller
Closing Remarks
How Far Can We Harmonize?
Honorable Christopher Bellamy
Comments
Tribal Sovereign Immunity: History, Competing Policies, and
Kiowa Tribe of Oklahoma v. Manufacturing Technologies, Inc.
Eric Governo
Centerior Service Co. v. Acme Scrap Iron & Metal Corp.
: Pleading for CERCLA Recovery
Joan M. Malik
Note
Marital Property Reform in Massachusetts: A Choice for the New Millennium
Kathleen M. O'Connor