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  1. 30 de mai. de 2019 · Increasing romanization could critically jeopardize decades of jurisprudential construction, causing economic disruption, destabilization of the law, and blindness towards real anticompetitive practices on the part of antitrust authorities, consequently placing the rule of law at risk.

    • Thibault Schrepel
    • 2019
  2. TY - JOUR. T1 - Antitrust Without Romance. AU - Schrepel, T.A.M. PY - 2020. Y1 - 2020. N2 - The romantics are taking over antitrust law. Building on populist rhetoric that pits the elites (often, the technological elite embodied by tech companies) against the people, they explain the need to sanction a minority who is presumably endangering the general interest.

  3. 1 de jan. de 2019 · This study focuses on the synergies entangling antitrust and AI, doing so to extend the literature by proffering the primary ways that these two fields intersect, consisting of: (1) the ...

    • Thibault Schrepel
  4. The romance must be taken out of antitrust. AB - Antitrust law is undergoing a transformation that is detrimental to the interest of the general public. "Romantics" are taking over antitrust law-a fact evinced by recent public outreach instruments.

    • T. Schrepel
    • 2020
  5. 2 de mar. de 2021 · emotion to ensure that antitrust law is working as it ought to.8 This Article introduces data showing that antitrust law is being romanticized in the public sphere. It exposes the danger of such a trend and proposes several reforms to achieve what I call “antitrust law without romance.” Public choice theory is particularly helpful in

    • Thibault Schrepel
    • 2019
  6. 28 de mai. de 2019 · This research closely examines the application of AI to antitrust and establishes an antitrust vigilance lifecycle to which AI is predicted to be substantively infused for purposes of enabling and bolstering antitrust detection, enforcement, and postenforcement monitoring.

  7. 16 de jun. de 2019 · Antitrust Without Romance. Thibault Schrepel Volume 13 - No. 2. Antitrust law is undergoing a transformation that is detrimental to the interest of the general public. “Romantics” are taking over antitrust law—a fact evinced by recent public outreach instruments.