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    Competition Policy in America: History, Rhetoric, Law

    Competition Policy in America by Peritz, Rudolph J. R.;

    History, Rhetoric, Law

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      • Publisher's listprice GBP 84.00
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        37 926 Ft (36 120 Ft + 5% VAT)
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    Product details:

    • Publisher OUP USA
    • Date of Publication 3 May 2001

    • ISBN 9780195144093
    • Binding Paperback
    • No. of pages424 pages
    • Size 229x155x29 mm
    • Weight 662 g
    • Language English
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    Short description:

    In this book Peritz analyses how free competition has signified both freedom from oppressive government and freedom from private economic power. Peritz shows how these two complex yet distinct and sometimes contradictory images have influenced government policy and continue to inspire public debate over political economy in America.

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    Long description:

    Americans have long appealed to images of free competition in calling for free enterprise, freedom of contract, free labor, free trade, and free speech. This imagery has retained its appeal in myriad aspects of public policy--for example, Senator Sherman's Anti-Trust Act of 1890, Justice Holmes's metaphorical marketplace of ideas, and President Reagan's rhetoric of deregulation.

    In Competition Policy in America, 1888-1992, Rudolph Peritz explores the durability of free competition imagery by tracing its influences on public policy. Looking at congressional debates and hearings, administrative agency activities, court opinions, arguments of counsel, and economic, legal, and political scholarship, he finds that free competition has actually evoked two different visions--freedom not only from oppressive government, but also from private economic power. He shows how the discourse of free competition has mediated between commitments to individual liberty and rough equality--themselves unstable over time. This rhetorical approach allows us to understand, for example, that the Reagan and Carter programs of deregulation, both inspired by the rhetoric of free competition, were driven by fundamentally different visions of political economy.

    Peritz's historical inquiry into competition policy as a series of government directives, inspired by two complex yet distinct and sometimes contradictory visions of free competition, provides an indispensable framework for understanding modern political economy-- whether political campaign finance reform, corporate takeover regulation, or current attitudes toward the New Deal Legacy. Competition Policy in America will be of great interest to lawyers, historians, economists, sociologists, and policy makers in both government and business.

    "The book is bold and provocative....a truly daunting enterprise that few others have dared to attempt."--Law and History Review

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