European Competition Journal
2012 - 2025
Current editor(s): Philip Marsden From Taylor & Francis Journals Bibliographic data for series maintained by Chris Longhurst (). Access Statistics for this journal.
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Volume 21, issue 1, 2025
- Antitrust restriction on football governance: the case of European Super League pp. 1-24

- Lei Kuang and Zeyu Zhao
- Quality control in the DMA procedure: the exclusion of the Hearing Officer pp. 25-53

- Konstantinos Pantelidis
- Overlooking digital collusion risks in the EU's agenda for a single European data space(s) pp. 54-75

- Erion Murati
- Comfort, or not comfort, that is the question. The legal status and consequences of comfort letters issued by the European Commission in State aid cases pp. 76-98

- Stefan Akira Jarecki and Kamil Ciupak
- Sustainability agreements and competition law: a comparative perspective pp. 99-124

- Margherita Colangelo
- Why cartel participation leads to financial statement fraud and market abuse pp. 125-139

- Jesper Fredborg Huric-Larsen
- Competition concerns with foundation models: a new feast for big tech? pp. 140-160

- Shourya Mitra
- Does DMA interoperability promote innovation: a comparative study from EU competition law to the DMA pp. 161-188

- Çağrı Çavuş
- Beyond administrative guidance: legal effects of state aid guidelines and the need for judicial review pp. 189-210

- Sofia Gierow
- The value of screening tools in cartel cases pp. 211-230

- Malin Arve, Armando Garcia Pires, Ronny Gjendemsjø, Ignacio Herrera Anchustegui and Frode Skjeret
Volume 20, issue 3, 2024
- On the interplay between competition law and privacy: the impact of Meta Platforms case pp. 555-576

- Arletta Gorecka
- Online travel agencies, minimum advertized prices and online intermediation services: some lessons from the Swedish Finnair case pp. 577-587

- Claudio Calcagno
- Charting the course of DMA’s private enforcement: unveiling the forum shopping challenge pp. 588-609

- Tamta Margvelashvili
- Broad collection of consumer data by Big Tech: exclusionary or exploitative abuse? pp. 610-638

- Christophe Samuel Hutchinson
- Balancing security and contestability in the DMA: the case of app stores pp. 639-674

- Zach Meyers
- No enforcement without representation: how participatory democracy can strengthen the Digital Markets Act pp. 675-696

- Inês Neves
- A fair share of sustainability benefits for consumers: the Horizontal Guidelines in the silent spring pp. 697-720

- Pedro Aránguez-Díaz
Volume 20, issue 2, 2024
- It ain’t over until it’s over – when do infringements of EU competition law end? pp. 243-273

- Jussi Koivusalo
- Multiplicity of tools for antitrust and consumer protection in digital markets: the Italian experience and the road ahead pp. 274-294

- Clara Calini and Elisabetta Iossa
- Attacking concentration: market power in the digital space pp. 295-314

- Rhonda Smith and Deborah Healey
- Unmasking excessive pricing: evolution of EU law on excessive pricing from United Brands to Aspen pp. 315-339

- Miroslava Marinova
- When should EU merger assessment address privacy? The conditions for addressing privacy issues under the EU merger control regulation pp. 340-366

- Lilian Klein
- Full compensation and the volume effect: assessing different policy options pp. 367-392

- Franziska Weber and Peter van Wijck
- FRAND determination under the European SEP Regulation Proposal: discarding the Huawei framework? pp. 393-411

- Giuseppe Colangelo
- Digital dominance: assessing market definition and market power for online platforms under Article 102 TFEU pp. 412-436

- Tone Knapstad
- Digital merger control: adapting theories of harm pp. 437-459

- Viktoria H. S. E. Robertson
- Interplay between Amazon store and logistics pp. 460-497

- Patrick Andreoli-Versbach and Joshua Gans
- The new regulation of telecommunications. The single voice of the European and national decision maker pp. 498-536

- Francesca Niola
- The impact of search engine data sharing on competition and consumer welfare pp. 537-554

- Bertin Martens
Volume 20, issue 1, 2024
- The cost coordination theory of harm and the EU trucks case pp. 1-24

- Timo Klein and Bertram Neurohr
- Cartel formation and the business cycle pp. 25-44

- Jesper Fredborg Huric-Larsen
- The Intel saga: what went wrong with the Commission’s AEC test (in the General Court’s view)? pp. 45-77

- Robert Lauer
- Incorporating privacy considerations into EU data-driven merger review pp. 78-112

- Christophe Samuel Hutchinson
- Apple’s antitrust paradox pp. 113-146

- Manuel Wörsdörfer
- Antitrust liability, corporate groups and M&A transactions: a tale of undertakings, economic continuity and effectiveness of EU competition law pp. 147-192

- Patrick Actis Perinetto and Giacomo Grechi
- Closing the tech acquisitions enforcement gap: from article 22 to article 102 pp. 193-217

- D’Amico Alessia Sophia
- Upstream market regulation between competitive tension and technological innovation pp. 218-241

- Francesca Niola
Volume 19, issue 3, 2023
- The impact of state aid on economic growth: fresh evidence from a panel of 27 EU countries pp. 359-379

- Nikoletta Poulou, Michael Polemis and Aikaterina Oikonomou
- Addressing data access problems in the emerging digital agriculture sector: potential of the refusal to deal case law to complement ex-ante regulation pp. 380-409

- Can Atik
- The future of anticompetitive self-preferencing: analysis of hypernudging by voice assistants under article 102 TFEU pp. 410-448

- Viktorija Morozovaite
- The centralised sale of football media rights in Europe pp. 449-480

- C.-Philipp Heller, Slobodan Sudaric and Anne-Christin Winkler
- Causation and counterfactual analysis in abuse of dominance cases – lessons from the General Court’s Qualcomm ruling pp. 481-521

- Elias Deutscher
- Economic analysis of proposed regulations of cloud services in Europe pp. 522-568

- Joshua Gans, Mikaël Hervé and Muath Masri
Volume 19, issue 2, 2023
- The antitrust privacy dilemma pp. 167-190

- Christophe Carugati
- From monocle to spectacles: competition for data and “data ecosystem building” pp. 191-225

- Peter J. van de Waerdt
- Big tech’s acquisition challenge to EU merger control pp. 226-245

- Christophe Samuel Hutchinson, Diana Treščáková, Anna Alexandrovna Berdnikova, Dmitry Sergeevich Samorodeskii, Dmitry Igorevich Lobanov and Stanislava Igorevna Semtsiva
- Methods of relevant product market delineation in antitrust cases: a critical survey pp. 246-260

- Aikaterina Oikonomou
- Who (and why) gets cited by the Commission? The role and quality of expert knowledge in Google antitrust saga pp. 261-284

- Joanna Mazur
- Auto cartels and the challenges they pose in private enforcement: scania cartel case pp. 285-306

- Aydin Mehdi Khani Saatlou and Reza Tajarlou
- Chicago, Harvard, Freiburg, or considerations for Single Market integration? Analysis of theoretical and ideational insights underpinning the European Commission’s merger control with exponential random graph models pp. 307-333

- Dzmitry Bartalevich
- Antitrust shrugged? Boycotts, content moderation, and free speech cartels pp. 334-358

- Jan Polański
Volume 19, issue 1, 2023
- The DMA in the broader regulatory landscape of the EU: an institutional perspective pp. 1-29

- Belle Beems
- Virtual assistants as gatekeepers for consumption? – how information intermediaries shape competition pp. 30-56

- Victoriia Noskova
- What does the Digital Markets Act harmonize? – exploring interactions between the DMA and national competition laws pp. 57-85

- Jasper van den Boom
- An inverse analysis of the digital markets act: applying the Ne bis in idem principle to enforcement pp. 86-115

- Alba Ribera Martínez
- Fitting the Digital Markets Act in the existing legal framework: the myth of the “without prejudice” clause pp. 116-149

- Konstantina Bania
- Dissonance in the European competition law regime of insufficient individual rivalry: the New Competition Tool as a glimmer of hope pp. 150-166

- Nora Lampecco
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