September 2002 Volume 2 Issue 1 www.antitrustsource.com
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Current and past issues of Antitrust Source included with links.

If you have a letter to the editor, an idea for what we should cover, or a submission for us to consider, please let us know.

Hard-to-find publicly available background material.

Antitrust Related Sites

The Antitrust Litigation Course | October 4 - 5, 2007

Renew your Section membership.

 
 
CURRENT ISSUE

New Federal Rules of Professional Responsibility: How Will Antitrust Lawyers Be Affected?

Section 307 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 sets "minimum standards of professional conduct" for attorneys. Learn how the new rules could affect antitrust lawyers representing public companies.

Ask the Ethics Experts

Questions and answers on ethical problems relating to billing practices and contacts with represented parties.

Review of The Free-Market Innovation Machine: Analyzing the Growth Miracle of Capitalism by William J. Baumol

An analysis of Baumol's new book and how it applies to antitrust doctrines past, present and future.

The FTC's Use of Disgorgement in Antitrust Actions Threatens to Undermine the Efficient Enforcement of Federal Antitrust Law

A detailed and provocative critique of the FTC's recent pursuit of disgorgement remedies in antitrust actions.

FTC/DOJ Organization Charts and Photos

An updated version of the Source's May 2002 on-line organizational charts and photos for the two federal enforcement agencies, reflecting recent restructurings and personnel changes.

Paper Trail

 
NB: From the Editor

WELCOME to the September 2002 issue of The Antitrust Source, the ABA Antitrust Section's newest and fastest-growing publication. This on-line magazine is published 6 times a year, and serves as your free on-line connection to the latest and best information in the world of antitrust. Each issue attracts thousands of visitors, eager for up to the minute analysis and commentary on the most relevant topics in the field.

This issue is packed with great stuff as always, including our first-ever ethics features. To read any of the articles, just click on the underscored links.

If there is something you think we should cover or you have something you'd like us to publish, send it to us at antitrust@att.net.

Finally, it is with great pleasure that I announce the publication of "Who Suffered Antitrust Injury in the Microsoft Case?" in the most recent issue of the George Washington Law Review, co-authored by Antitrust Source editorial board member, William Page. You can read more about this special edition of the GW Law Review, a symposium issue devoted to antitrust remedies, in this month's Paper Trail. Congratulations, Bill.

Christopher B. Hockett
Editorial Chair

Vol. 2 Issue 1