Best antitrust law books according to redditors
We found 7 Reddit comments discussing the best antitrust law books. We ranked the 7 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.
We found 7 Reddit comments discussing the best antitrust law books. We ranked the 7 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.
Dan Crane's Antitrust treatise was incredibly helpful for me. (But he taught my class so, duh, of course it was.)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Wealth_of_Nations
Or read this book
http://www.amazon.com/Antitrust-Law-Second-Richard-Posner/dp/0226675769
I ended up with an A - which BLEW my mind. The professor made it kind of known to me and several others at the beginning of the semester that he thought I was kind of ill equipped for the class. Which I think motivated me to really kill the exam. I read a book that REALLLLLY helped me! Actually now that I look at the book, it's written by your professor.
http://www.amazon.com/Hovenkamps-Black-Letter-Outline-Antitrust/dp/0314274480/ref=sr_1_8?ie=UTF8&qid=1412870129&sr=8-8&keywords=antitrust+law
Again, that's an incredibly broad question. That might be covered by an entire class in law school, but even that class would still address the topics only generally. And that would also require a foundation of other, prior classes you've taken in law school to understand the concepts you're discussing.
You can't answer that type of question in a short response. You're going to get entire (and really large) books on this subject.
Here's a hornbook called The Law of Antitrust.
Here's another called Federal Antitrust Policy.
Here's one called Examples and Explanations: Antitrust.
Here's one called Understanding Antitrust and Its Economic Implications.
These are huge, huge books. And they're also really dense, and probably really technical. So you're unlikely to get an answer to a question that technical and broad.
If you've got a specific topic you want to ask about, that might get an answer.