No. 79-3, December 2014
Index
- Acknowledgments: volume 79
- When the state harms competition-the role for competition law
- Editor's note: Robert Bork, originalism, and bounded antitrust
- The tempting of antitrust: Robert Bork and the goals of antitrust policy
- Out of control? Robert Bork's portrayal of the U.S. antitrust system in the 1970s
- Was the crisis in antitrust a trojan horse?
- Bork's bowman: 'not gone, but forgotten
- Antitrust made (too) simple
- Bork's 'legislative intent' and the courts
- Robert bork's forgotten role in the transaction cost revolution
- Robert bork and vertical integration: leverage, foreclosure, and efficiency
- The transformation of vertical restraints: per se illegality, the rule of reason, and per se legality
- Bork and Microsoft: why bork was right and what we learn about judging exclusionary behavior
- Afterword: lorain journal and the antitrust legacy of Robert bork