- published: 13 Oct 2011
- views: 485
8:20
Competition Law & Intellectual Property - Where the Lines Cross - Lunchtime Webinar
to view this full webinar go to http://www.mblseminars.com/outline.aspx?progid=1944...
published: 13 Oct 2011
Competition Law & Intellectual Property - Where the Lines Cross - Lunchtime Webinar
to view this full webinar go to http://www.mblseminars.com/outline.aspx?progid=1944
- published: 13 Oct 2011
- views: 485
75:38
Competition Law and the Free Market - The Antitrust Paradox: A Policy at War with Itself
As part of our 25th Anniversary celebration the Federalist Society presented a full-day Co...
published: 21 Apr 2011
Competition Law and the Free Market - The Antitrust Paradox: A Policy at War with Itself
As part of our 25th Anniversary celebration the Federalist Society presented a full-day Conference on June 26, 2007, honoring Judge Robert H. Bork and his contributions to the law.
In The Antitrust Paradox: A Policy at War with Itself, Judge Bork maintained that antitrust enforcement had overzealously applied the law in a manner that led to the protection of inefficient firms and the sanctioning of efficient firms, to the ultimate detriment of consumers. This form of interference in the free market, he argued, raised consumer prices by supporting flagging companies in order to maintain the perception of competition. How have Judge Bork's insights informed antitrust law and enforcement over the past 25 years? Have Judge Bork's views changed the approach utilized by courts in antitrust litigation? How has Judge Bork's analytical framework informed the debate about competition policy in new and emerging industries, such as the high tech sector?
Panelists:
--Hon. Frank H. Easterbrook, United States Court of Appeals, Seventh Circuit
--Hon. Douglas H. Ginsburg, United States Court of Appeals, District of Columbia Circuit
--Prof. George L. Priest, Yale Law School
--Moderator: Dean Bernard Dobranski, Ave Maria School of Law
The Mayflower Hotel,
Washington, DC
- published: 21 Apr 2011
- views: 2272
36:19
King's College London: "Tolstoy, EU Competition Law and the Big Society"
Dr Christopher Townley, lecturer in the School of Law at King's College London, gives a le...
published: 22 Jun 2011
King's College London: "Tolstoy, EU Competition Law and the Big Society"
Dr Christopher Townley, lecturer in the School of Law at King's College London, gives a lecture discussing European competition law, and the effects that EC legislation might have on the government's efforts to curb binge drinking in the UK as a part of their model for a "big society".
- published: 22 Jun 2011
- views: 3158
7:29
Highlights: Deterring EU Competition Law Infringements. Are We Using the Right Sanctions?
In a conference organised on 3 December in Brussels, the Tilburg Law & Economics Centre (T...
published: 11 Jan 2013
Highlights: Deterring EU Competition Law Infringements. Are We Using the Right Sanctions?
In a conference organised on 3 December in Brussels, the Tilburg Law & Economics Centre (TILEC) and the Liège Competition Innovation Institute (LCII), prominent academics, regulators and practitioners discussed differing approaches to sanctions in competition law. The high-level full-day conference "Deterring Competition Law Infringements: Are We Using the Right Sanctions" was designed to bring detailed analysis and up-to-date knowledge about emerging trends in optimal deterrence and sanctions. The results contained in these interviews send a signal on the need for a modern approach to cartel sanctioning policies and procedures in order to achieve the EU's stated goal of higher deterrence.
Competition law regimes across the world have typically relied on a diverse set of sanctions to deter companies from engaging in anti-competitive behaviour. In contrast the EU competition law regime has so far focused on ever increasing levels of corporate fines, stemming to a large extent from the Commission's desire to increase deterrence.
However, a growing number of voices are questioning whether increasing the level of corporate fines is indeed the most appropriate means for increasing deterrence. Other criticisms of the EU's sanctioning regime allege a high level of uncertainty, raise questions about its compatibility with international instruments protecting due process, criticise its lack of consideration for corporate compliance programs and the quasi-automatic finding of parental liability. A key criticism laments the absence of individual sanctions targeting the individuals who are the perpetrators of an antitrust violation.
- published: 11 Jan 2013
- views: 619
4:20
Damien Geradin on Deterring EU Competition Law Infringments. INTERVIEW
Damien Geradin (Partner Covington & Burling) provides an overview of the Conference object...
published: 11 Jan 2013
Damien Geradin on Deterring EU Competition Law Infringments. INTERVIEW
Damien Geradin (Partner Covington & Burling) provides an overview of the Conference objective to debate the various positions and identify optimal sanctions.
In a conference organised on 3 December in Brussels, the Tilburg Law & Economics Centre (TILEC) and the Liège Competition Innovation Institute (LCII), prominent academics, regulators and practitioners discussed differing approaches to sanctions in competition law. The high-level full-day conference "Deterring Competition Law Infringements: Are We Using the Right Sanctions" was designed to bring detailed analysis and up-to-date knowledge about emerging trends in optimal deterrence and sanctions. The results contained in these interviews send a signal on the need for a modern approach to cartel sanctioning policies and procedures in order to achieve the EU's stated goal of higher deterrence.
Competition law regimes across the world have typically relied on a diverse set of sanctions to deter companies from engaging in anti-competitive behaviour. In contrast the EU competition law regime has so far focused on ever increasing levels of corporate fines, stemming to a large extent from the Commission's desire to increase deterrence.
However, a growing number of voices are questioning whether increasing the level of corporate fines is indeed the most appropriate means for increasing deterrence. Other criticisms of the EU's sanctioning regime allege a high level of uncertainty, raise questions about its compatibility with international instruments protecting due process, criticise its lack of consideration for corporate compliance programs and the quasi-automatic finding of parental liability. A key criticism laments the absence of individual sanctions targeting the individuals who are the perpetrators of an antitrust violation.
- published: 11 Jan 2013
- views: 82
3:46
Stephan Thomas on Deterring EU Competition Law Infringements. INTERVIEW
Stephan Thomas (Professor of Law, Tubingen University) confirms the Commission's failure t...
published: 11 Jan 2013
Stephan Thomas on Deterring EU Competition Law Infringements. INTERVIEW
Stephan Thomas (Professor of Law, Tubingen University) confirms the Commission's failure to consider compliance programmes as a mitigating factor.
In a conference organised on 3 December in Brussels, the Tilburg Law & Economics Centre (TILEC) and the Liège Competition Innovation Institute (LCII), prominent academics, regulators and practitioners discussed differing approaches to sanctions in competition law. The high-level full-day conference "Deterring Competition Law Infringements: Are We Using the Right Sanctions" was designed to bring detailed analysis and up-to-date knowledge about emerging trends in optimal deterrence and sanctions. The results contained in these interviews send a signal on the need for a modern approach to cartel sanctioning policies and procedures in order to achieve the EU's stated goal of higher deterrence.
Competition law regimes across the world have typically relied on a diverse set of sanctions to deter companies from engaging in anti-competitive behaviour. In contrast the EU competition law regime has so far focused on ever increasing levels of corporate fines, stemming to a large extent from the Commission's desire to increase deterrence.
However, a growing number of voices are questioning whether increasing the level of corporate fines is indeed the most appropriate means for increasing deterrence. Other criticisms of the EU's sanctioning regime allege a high level of uncertainty, raise questions about its compatibility with international instruments protecting due process, criticise its lack of consideration for corporate compliance programs and the quasi-automatic finding of parental liability. A key criticism laments the absence of individual sanctions targeting the individuals who are the perpetrators of an antitrust violation.
- published: 11 Jan 2013
- views: 81
2:33
Luis Ortiz Blanco on Deterring EU Competition Law Infringements. INTERVIEW
Luis Ortiz Blanco (Partner Garrigues Partner, Garrigues & Professor, Complutense
Universi...
published: 11 Jan 2013
Luis Ortiz Blanco on Deterring EU Competition Law Infringements. INTERVIEW
Luis Ortiz Blanco (Partner Garrigues Partner, Garrigues & Professor, Complutense
University Madrid) explains that the major weakness with relying solely on fines is that in the end it is the shareholders and workers who suffer the most not the perpetrators of the cartel or anti-trust infringement.
In a conference organised on 3 December in Brussels, the Tilburg Law & Economics Centre (TILEC) and the Liège Competition Innovation Institute (LCII), prominent academics, regulators and practitioners discussed differing approaches to sanctions in competition law. The high-level full-day conference "Deterring Competition Law Infringements: Are We Using the Right Sanctions" was designed to bring detailed analysis and up-to-date knowledge about emerging trends in optimal deterrence and sanctions. The results contained in these interviews send a signal on the need for a modern approach to cartel sanctioning policies and procedures in order to achieve the EU's stated goal of higher deterrence.
Competition law regimes across the world have typically relied on a diverse set of sanctions to deter companies from engaging in anti-competitive behaviour. In contrast the EU competition law regime has so far focused on ever increasing levels of corporate fines, stemming to a large extent from the Commission's desire to increase deterrence.
However, a growing number of voices are questioning whether increasing the level of corporate fines is indeed the most appropriate means for increasing deterrence. Other criticisms of the EU's sanctioning regime allege a high level of uncertainty, raise questions about its compatibility with international instruments protecting due process, criticise its lack of consideration for corporate compliance programs and the quasi-automatic finding of parental liability. A key criticism laments the absence of individual sanctions targeting the individuals who are the perpetrators of an antitrust violation.
- published: 11 Jan 2013
- views: 58
4:21
The Goals of Competition Law
BOOK REVIEW
THE GOALS OF COMPETITION LAW
Edited by Daniel Zimmer
Edward Elgar Publishi...
published: 26 May 2012
The Goals of Competition Law
BOOK REVIEW
THE GOALS OF COMPETITION LAW
Edited by Daniel Zimmer
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
ISBN: 978 0 85793 660 8
www.e-elgar.com
OF SPECIAL INTEREST TO LEGAL SCHOLARS, ACADEMICS AND ALL THOSE INTERESTED IN COMPETITION LAW AND COMPETITION ECONOMICS
An appreciation by Phillip Taylor MBE and Elizabeth Taylor of Richmond Green Chambers
In this work of reference the editor, Daniel Zimmer, brings together a truly international collection of 26 learned articles from leading academics and lawyers in the field of competition law and competition economics.
The expert contributors hail from a range of universities worldwide, from Harvard University and Yale Law School to Laval University in Canada, the University of Haifa, the Max Planck Institute in Germany, Mejii University in Tokyo and, interestingly, the American Antitrust Institute in the United States.
These, of course, are only a few examples of the wide range of opinion and comment contained in this book on matters pertaining to competition law. Daniel Zimmer, the editor, is a Professor of Law from the University of Bonn and Member of the German Monopolies Commission.
It was Zimmer who organized the ASCOLA conference at the University of Bonn in 2010 at which this selection of papers was presented. (For ASCOLA read Academic Society for Competition Law).
Significantly, we're perusing this book just after 'Europe Day' May 9th which commemorates a now little known and seldom remarked upon event in the development of the European Community as a group of nations dedicated to -- basically -- fair trade.
We refer to the Schumann Declaration launched some 60 years ago by the same Robert Schumann who was instrumental in founding the European Coal and Steel Community, from which the European Economic Community evolved and which in turn led to the advent of the present European Union (EU).
The original aim of the EEC, one must recall, centered on establishing equal rights in the competition for trade. This means that trading nations and individual traders should each have a fair crack of the whip when selling things -- the basis of any market economy.
The lessons we are learning and have learnt in Europe over the past few decades will no doubt impact upon and influence many an emerging economy in the wider global context.
This book, based on the ASCOLA conference (chaired by Louis Kaplow of Harvard University) poses a number of questions relating to competition and specifically, competition law, two of which centre on the concept of 'freedom to compete' and on distributional fairness as a goal of competition law.
Particularly interesting is the final article by the editor which asks -- to cite just one example -- whether or not 'competition' means 'efficiency'. This, of course, is debatable and all the more interesting for that.
Published recently by Edward Elgar, this book, with its economics-based approach and international orientation, will certainly interest academic lawyers, graduate students and indeed policy makers whose decisions may affect the economic welfare of whole regions. With detailed footnotes and index, the compilation is also especially useful as a gateway to further research.
- published: 26 May 2012
- views: 167
3:30
Andreas Stephan on Deterring EU Competition Law Infringements. INTERVIEW
Andreas Stephan (Lecturer University of East Anglia) suggests that the Commission should u...
published: 11 Jan 2013
Andreas Stephan on Deterring EU Competition Law Infringements. INTERVIEW
Andreas Stephan (Lecturer University of East Anglia) suggests that the Commission should use the European Competition Network to create mechanisms so that individual sanctions at national level reinforce cartel enforcement at EU level.
In a conference organised on 3 December in Brussels, the Tilburg Law & Economics Centre (TILEC) and the Liège Competition Innovation Institute (LCII), prominent academics, regulators and practitioners discussed differing approaches to sanctions in competition law. The high-level full-day conference "Deterring Competition Law Infringements: Are We Using the Right Sanctions" was designed to bring detailed analysis and up-to-date knowledge about emerging trends in optimal deterrence and sanctions. The results contained in these interviews send a signal on the need for a modern approach to cartel sanctioning policies and procedures in order to achieve the EU's stated goal of higher deterrence.
Competition law regimes across the world have typically relied on a diverse set of sanctions to deter companies from engaging in anti-competitive behaviour. In contrast the EU competition law regime has so far focused on ever increasing levels of corporate fines, stemming to a large extent from the Commission's desire to increase deterrence.
However, a growing number of voices are questioning whether increasing the level of corporate fines is indeed the most appropriate means for increasing deterrence. Other criticisms of the EU's sanctioning regime allege a high level of uncertainty, raise questions about its compatibility with international instruments protecting due process, criticise its lack of consideration for corporate compliance programs and the quasi-automatic finding of parental liability. A key criticism laments the absence of individual sanctions targeting the individuals who are the perpetrators of an antitrust violation.
- published: 11 Jan 2013
- views: 134
4:27
EU Competition Law and Economics
BOOK REVIEW
EU COMPETITION LAW AND ECONOMICS
By Damien Geradin, Anne Layne-Farrar, Nicol...
published: 15 Jul 2012
EU Competition Law and Economics
BOOK REVIEW
EU COMPETITION LAW AND ECONOMICS
By Damien Geradin, Anne Layne-Farrar, Nicolas Petit
Oxford University Press
ISBN: 978 0 19 956656 3
www.oup.com
FOR COMPETITION LAWYERS WITH CORPORATE CLIENTS, (NOT TO MENTION ECONOMISTS AND NON-SPECIALIST PRACTITIONERS)
An appreciation by Phillip Taylor MBE and Elizabeth Taylor of Richmond Green Chambers
There are a number of areas in which law and economics are inextricably linked; competition law being one of them.
Additionally, as perceived by the general public, competition law has one of the highest profiles of any area of law, if only because, by its very nature, it almost inevitably involves large well known companies. The expert authors of this timely publication from the Oxford University Press cite a number of examples from both sides of the Atlantic: among them Sotheby's, the famous Roche 'vitamins' case and Microsoft to name just three.
Cited by the publishers as the first EU competition law treatise that offers a genuinely integrated approach to both legal and economic issues, this major new work brings together in one volume the quite vast range of issues and subject areas likely to be encountered by competition lawyers and economists alike.
The book commences with an examination of the history of competition law. Competition and monopolization originate in antiquity -- the astronomer Thales apparently had a lot to answer for over his olive oil monopoly -- but the first bodies of competition law which can be termed 'modern' date back only to the end of the nineteenth century when the first piece of competition legislation appeared in North America, first in Canada in 1889 and in the US a year later.
These two nations rules, say the authors, 'had a significant influence on the design and content of the EU completion rules.' Well, that applies an interesting perspective to EU competition law, which has its particular roots in the legislative framework emanating from the original Iron and Steel community.
This scholarly and skillfully organized book contains any amount of similarly insightful observation -- especially on specific cases -- which offer their own peculiar fascination. Here's just one quote, for example, that may occasion considerable debate:
'Many consider that (especially following Microsoft v. Commission and Wanadoo v. Commission) those cases demonstrate the EU Courts' discomfort in matters involving sophisticated economic analysis. To increase the effectiveness of judicial review, as well as to reduce the average duration of proceedings before the EU Courts (currently it takes 20 to 30 months for the GC to rule on a competition case), a number of observers have recently argued in favour of establishing a specialist competition court at the EU level, similar to the Competition Appeals Tribunal in the UK.'
This of course is yet another instance of the thought provoking commentary provided by the expert authors: two of whom are competition law practitioners and academics, the other a well known economic consultant.
Certainly the book provides an in-depth examination (from both an historical perspective as well as the contemporary standpoint) of each of the core areas of EU competition law, including horizontal agreements... vertical restraints... merger litigation and control and certainly, cartels -- these being originally considered acceptable for continental Europe, but now anathema.
For those professionally or personally involved in the issues raised in the arena of competition law, this volume, distinguished by its clarity of explanation and expression, is an enlightening read. Ample tools for further inquiry are provided, including extensive tables of cases, legislation and Commission decisions.
This book does emerge as an authoritative work of abiding interest to specialist legal practitioners, as well as economists and everyone involved professionally with EU competition law. The publication date is 2012.
- published: 15 Jul 2012
- views: 655
3:30
MEP Peter Skinner on Deterring EU Competition Law Infringements. INTERVIEW
Peter Skinner (Member of the European Parliament) argues that the competition law should b...
published: 11 Jan 2013
MEP Peter Skinner on Deterring EU Competition Law Infringements. INTERVIEW
Peter Skinner (Member of the European Parliament) argues that the competition law should be modernised and that the EP should have a much more vigorous role in this policy field.
In a conference organised on 3 December in Brussels, the Tilburg Law & Economics Centre (TILEC) and the Liège Competition Innovation Institute (LCII), prominent academics, regulators and practitioners discussed differing approaches to sanctions in competition law. The high-level full-day conference "Deterring Competition Law Infringements: Are We Using the Right Sanctions" was designed to bring detailed analysis and up-to-date knowledge about emerging trends in optimal deterrence and sanctions. The results contained in these interviews send a signal on the need for a modern approach to cartel sanctioning policies and procedures in order to achieve the EU's stated goal of higher deterrence.
Competition law regimes across the world have typically relied on a diverse set of sanctions to deter companies from engaging in anti-competitive behaviour. In contrast the EU competition law regime has so far focused on ever increasing levels of corporate fines, stemming to a large extent from the Commission's desire to increase deterrence.
However, a growing number of voices are questioning whether increasing the level of corporate fines is indeed the most appropriate means for increasing deterrence. Other criticisms of the EU's sanctioning regime allege a high level of uncertainty, raise questions about its compatibility with international instruments protecting due process, criticise its lack of consideration for corporate compliance programs and the quasi-automatic finding of parental liability. A key criticism laments the absence of individual sanctions targeting the individuals who are the perpetrators of an antitrust violation.
- published: 11 Jan 2013
- views: 63
32:57
Dissecting the market definition of Competition Law
Conducted by:
Kiran Desai, Partner, Mayer Brown
Farhad Sorabjee, Partner, J Sagar & Associ...
published: 16 Jan 2013
Dissecting the market definition of Competition Law
Conducted by:
Kiran Desai, Partner, Mayer Brown
Farhad Sorabjee, Partner, J Sagar & Associates
Amitabh Kumar, Senior Advisor, J Sagar & Associates and
formerly the Director General of the Competition Commission
- published: 16 Jan 2013
- views: 20
Vimeo results:
1:59
CAROLINE - A film by Mani Nasry
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm1421199/
Director/Producer/Writer -MANI NASRY
http://twitter...
published: 03 Dec 2009
author: MANI NASRY
CAROLINE - A film by Mani Nasry
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm1421199/
Director/Producer/Writer -MANI NASRY
http://twitter.com/#!/ManiNasry
Mani Nasry an exceptionally talented filmmaker, actor and artist with a sophisticated breadth of education, skills, experience, and professional accomplishments. He trained as an actor and director in New York with Salem Ludwig and with Donna DeMatteo for playwriting. For Mani, the decision to work in the film industry guided his academic decisions from an early age. He attended a Toronto high school renowned for excellence in the arts, and was accepted into one of the highly competitive film program at Ryerson university. It is notable that he went to Ryerson with an already well-established career in theatre, film, television and commercial work, and a range of multi-faceted achievements including producing, cinematography, casting, writing, directing, acting, and editing. On his own he added stints in New York and Los Angeles with leading acting teachers, as well as learning the grace and style of many forms of dance and athletics. With courses perceptively, he has also recognized the importance of acquiring an understanding of the business side of the industry, and the varied aspects of technology and production. There are some people clearly born to follow the path they have chosen from the start. Mani Nasry has the passion to succeed, the curiosity and ingenuity required to lead and collaborate in an industry known for its impact and appeal, and the strength of character and work ethic to immerse himself in finding and telling an unforgettable story.
MANI NASRY FILM AND TELEVISION RESUME Performer Profile Gender: Male Height: 5 feet 7 in Weight: 140 Age Range: 21 - 29 Physique: Athletic Hair Color: Brown Eyes: Brown Film Family Curse (2003 TV movie) Cast-Apr 01, 2003 SHADOW WALKERS PRODUCTIONS LTD Dawn of the Dead (2004) Cast-May 25, 2003/Jul 20, 2003 CORPUS VIVOS PRODUCTIONS INC Beautiful Girl (2003 TV movie) Cast-Aug 31, 2003 NEVER TIME PRODUCTIONS LTD New York Minute (2004/I) Cast-Sep 07, 2003 NY MINUTE FILMS INC Prom Queen: The Marc Hall Story (2004 TV movie) Cast-Oct 18, 2003 ADJUSTMENT BULLOCH Childstar (2004) Cast-Nov 23, 2003/Dec 07, 2003 RHOMBUS MEDIA The Coven (2004 TV movie) Cast-Dec 07, 2003 COVEN PRODUCTIONS CORP Man of the Year (2006) Cast-Feb 14, 2006 AXIUM ENTERTAINMENT SERVICES CANADA HOOKED ON SPEEDMAN Cast-Mar 08, 2006 PLAYING ARMY PRODUCTIONS INC "WHAT DO YOU SEE 1" Cast-Mar 14, 2006 ARNOLD WORLDWIDE CANADA Road to Christmas (2006 TV movie) Cast-Apr 02, 2006/ Apr 23, 2006 LET IT SNOW PRODUCTIONS INC. Mr. Magorium's Wonder Emporium (2007) Cast-May 14, 2006 STUPID ZEBRA PRODUCTIONS INC Camille (2007) Cast-Jun 25, 2006 CAMILLE PRODUCTIONS INC LOVE BITES Cast-Jun 25, 2006 LOVE BUGS PRODUCTIONS INC Talk to Me (2007) Cast-Jul 02, 2006/Jul 09, 2006 TALK TO ME PRODUCTIONS INC LIPSTICK Cast-Jul 23, 2006 LIPSTICK FILMS INC Late Fragment (2008) Cast-Oct 22, 2006 KATMADHU INC Diary of the Dead (2007) Cast-Nov 05, 2006 DEAD DIARY PRODUCTIONS INC Trapped (2007 TV series documentary) Cast-Feb 28, 2007 NF (TRAPPED) INC Céline (2008 TV movie) Cast-Apr 09, 2007 CHART TOPPING PRODUCTIONS INC Saw IV (2007) Cast-Apr 16, 2007 SAW IV PRODUCTIONS INC The Incredible Hulk (2008) Cast-Jul 09, 2007 MVL INCREDIBLE PRODUCTIONS CANADA, INC. The Echo (2008) Cast-Aug 13, 2007 DCP ECHO PRODUCTIONS INC The Love Guru (2008) Cast-Sep 07, 2007 LOVE GURU PRODUCTIONS INC Traitor (2008) Cast-Sep 10, 2007 CINEBRIDGE PRODUCTIONS INC Murder on Her Mind (2008 TV movie) Cast-Oct 01, 2007 YELLOW NOTEBOOK PROD. INC. Anne of Green Gables: A New Beginning (2008 TV movie) Cast-Oct 10, 2007 ANNE PREQUEL PRODUCTIONS INC Repossession Mambo (2009) Cast-Oct 15, 2007 MAMBO FILM PRODUCTIONS INC Toronto Stories (2008) Cast-Oct 15, 2007 TORONTO STORIES Wisegal (2008 TV movie) Cast-Oct 26, 2007 WISEGIRL FILMS INC SMACK Cast SLAVA KOSTYACHENKO THE CURSE OF CHARLIE MARCEL Cast 9 TH LIFE PRODUCTIONS INC THE POCKET WATCH Cast REBECCA ROSE TURN TO NOWHERE Cast ARTMILL CREATIVE GROUP MODERN ART Cast YEUNG ART PRODUCTIONS BLIND ENCOUNTER Cast TOBESCENE PRODUCTION/GUY EARLE OFFICE IMPLOSION Cast JONATHAN WORMAN/NICOLE DORSEY PRODUCT THE BLACK DON Cast TRIPOD PRODUCTION/ EFRAIN GARCIA BEEF Cast THOMAS LIEU/KEVIN C.W.WONG/PROJECT NORI ALBERT LOVES YOU Cast TAD MICHALAK-BEN LICHTY-FRASER BROWN BURDEN Cast Sean Bodden SWITCH Cast Ian Schaiwer GROWING UP A MARCIANO Cast JENNIFER KASSABIAN/ E S B E PRODUCITON THE PLAYERS Cast CRAWLEY PRODUCT GONE FOREVER Cast 14 FILM WORLD APPARTS Cast PAUL MUZZIN THE GLOW Cast GLOW PRODUCTIONS/CRAIG R. BAXLEY Flashback Cast 14 FILM When Bad Things Happen To Good People Cast 14 FILM Television The Call (2004 TV series documentary) Cast-Oct 23, 2003/Nov 13, 2003 Life Network -1536901 ONTARIO INC VIOLENT CRIME Cast-Mar 16, 2003 VC PRODUCTIONS INC UNTITLED HOLLAND FULLER Cast-Mar 23, 2003 MILLENNIUM CANADIAN PRODUCTIONS EAST SHAKESPEARVILLE Cast-May 11, 2003 681417 ONTARIO LIMITED Platinum (2003 TV series) C
8:14
The Dogmatic
An overly-zealous animal rescue group takes the law into their own hands, while risking th...
published: 22 Sep 2012
author: Lance Oppenheim
The Dogmatic
An overly-zealous animal rescue group takes the law into their own hands, while risking their own lives, to save jilted dogs by stealing them from abusive owners.
---
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt2455122/
facebook.com/thedogmatic
---
Prior to the making of this film, I initially intended to focus on a "simple" story of animal welfare. But sometimes things don't work out exactly as planned. Instead, I stumbled upon an even more intriguing story of societal neglect, economic despair, morality and self-fulfillment.
I recognize the controversy surrounding the issues presented in the film and have purposely left it to you, the viewer, to formulate your own opinion.
---
Winner: "Best Short Documentary" - The Accolade Competition
Winner: "Best Short Documentary" - Best Shorts Competition
14:20
WHU Euromasters 2011
The official film of WHU Euromasters 2011 - Europe's biggest sports event for business sch...
published: 30 Jan 2012
author: Kevin Bressler
WHU Euromasters 2011
The official film of WHU Euromasters 2011 - Europe's biggest sports event for business schools.
For this free project I helped out some friends with their studies in journalism at the University of Applied Sciences Bonn, Germany.
www.euromasters2011.de
facebook.com/WHUEuromasters
Edit: Kevin Bressler, Joel Drießen
Postproduction/Motiondesign/Sounddesign: Kevin Bressler
Camera: Kevin Bressler, Joel Drießen, Matthias Jilg
Music:
Angels & Airwaves - Epic Holiday (Instrumental)
Avicii - Levels (Official Event Soundtrack)
Tom Rez - Levels (Remix)
LFMAO - Sexy And I know It (Remix)
Sak Noel - Loca People
I do not hold any rights of this songs. I just used them within the fair use copyright law.
The event-organisation has the rights to use the music.
© 2012 Kevin Bressler, Joel Drießen, Matthias Jilg
78:24
The Inaugural Henry Cole Lecture: Sir Christopher Frayling, 30 October 2008
The inaugural Henry Cole Lecture, held at the V&A; Museum in London on 30 October 2008. Th...
published: 22 Sep 2009
author: Victoria and Albert Museum
The Inaugural Henry Cole Lecture: Sir Christopher Frayling, 30 October 2008
The inaugural Henry Cole Lecture, held at the V&A; Museum in London on 30 October 2008. The purpose of the lecture is to celebrate the legacy of the Museum’s founding director, and explore its implications for museums, culture and society today.
The lecture, entitled 'We Must Have Steam: Get Cole! Henry Cole, the Chamber of Horrors, and the Educational Role of the Museum' was delivered by Professor Sir Christopher Frayling. He presented new research on the “chamber of horrors” (a contemporary nickname for one of the V&A;'s earliest galleries, 'Decorations on False Principles', that opened in 1852) and the myths and realities of its reception, then opened up a wider debate on design education and museums from the nineteenth century to the present day.
Transcript:
Mark Jones: The annual Henry Cole lecture has been initiated to celebrate Henry Cole's legacy and to explore the contribution that culture can make to education and society today. It has also been launched to celebrate the opening of the Sackler Centre for arts education, including the Hochhauser Auditorium in which we sit tonight. There could be no one better than Professor Sir Christopher Frayling to give the inaugural Henry Cole Lecture. Christopher is a rare being: an intellectual who is a great communicator; a theorist who has a firm grip on the practical realities of life: a writer who truly and instinctively understands the words of making design and visual communication. As an enormously successful and respected Rector of the Royal College of Art, as Chairman of the Arts Council, and as a member and chair of boards too numerous to mention - but not forgetting the Royal Mint Advisory Committee which has recently been responsible for redesigning the coinage (personal interest) and as by far the longest-serving Trustee of the V&A;, he brings together culture, education and public service in a way which Henry Cole would have approved and admired. So it's more than fitting that he should be giving this first Henry Cole Lecture, 'We Must Have Steam: Get Cole! Henry Cole, the Chamber of Horrors, and the Educational Role of the Museum'.
CHRISTOPHER FRAYLING:
Thank you very much indeed Mark and thank you very much for inviting me to give this first Henry Cole Lecture. Just how much of an honour it is for me will I hope become clear as the lecture progresses.
Mark, Chairpeople, ladies and gentlemen:
Hidden away in the garden of the South Kensington Museum - now the Madejski Garden of the V&A; - there is a small and easily overlooked commemorative plaque that doesn't have a museum number. It reads: 'In Memory of Jim Died 1879 Aged 15 Years, Faithful Dog of Sir Henry Cole of this Museum'. Jim had in fact died on 30 January 1879. He was with Henry Cole in his heyday, as the king of South Kensington - its museums and colleges - and saw him through to retirement from the public service and beyond. And next to this inscription there's another one dedicated to Jim's successor, Tycho, and dated 1885. The dogs are actually buried in the garden. Now we know from Henry Cole's diary that between 1864 and 1879 Jim, who was a cairn terrier, was often to be seen in public at his master's side. In 1864 they were together inspecting the new memorial to the Great Exhibition of 1851 just behind the Albert Hall - a statue of Prince Albert by Joseph Durham on a lofty plinth covered in statistics about the income, expenditure and visitor numbers to the Great Exhibition: 6,039,195 to be exact. Cole had been a tireless champion of Prince Albert and according to the Princess Royal (later Empress of Prussia) there was a family saying in Buckingham Palace at the time, invented by Albert himself, that when things needed doing 'when we want steam we must get Cole'. We may therefore assume that when looking at the memorial, Cole was interested in the inscription, the statistics and the likeness of Prince Albert, while Jim was more interested in the possibilities of the plinth. In early 1866 - these are five studies of Jim, an etching by Henry Cole himself of 1864. In early 1866, first thing in the morning, soon after the workmen's bell had rung, Henry and Jim would set forth together from Cole's newly constructed official residence in the Museum (where he moved in July 1863) to tour the building sites of South Kensington - a name which was first invented by Cole when he re-named the museum The South Kensington Museum to describe the new developments happening around Brompton Church. According to 'The Builder' magazine, these two well-known figures would 'be seen clambering over bricks, mortar and girders up ladders and about scaffolding'. Several buildings in the South Kensington Renaissance Revival style were springing up all around them: The Natural History Museum, The College of Science, the extension to this Museum. And on the morning the Bethnal Green Museum opened - 24 June 1872 - Jim showed a healthy distaste for his master's well-known predilection for pomp and
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4:28
Jacques Steenbergen on Deterring EU Competition Law Infringements. INTERVIEW
Jacques Steenbergen (President, Belgian Competition Authority) states that everyone agrees...
published: 11 Jan 2013
Jacques Steenbergen on Deterring EU Competition Law Infringements. INTERVIEW
Jacques Steenbergen (President, Belgian Competition Authority) states that everyone agrees that individual sanctions are the most effective to achieve optimal deterrence.
In a conference organised on 3 December in Brussels, the Tilburg Law & Economics Centre (TILEC) and the Liège Competition Innovation Institute (LCII), prominent academics, regulators and practitioners discussed differing approaches to sanctions in competition law. The high-level full-day conference "Deterring Competition Law Infringements: Are We Using the Right Sanctions" was designed to bring detailed analysis and up-to-date knowledge about emerging trends in optimal deterrence and sanctions. The results contained in these interviews send a signal on the need for a modern approach to cartel sanctioning policies and procedures in order to achieve the EU's stated goal of higher deterrence.
Competition law regimes across the world have typically relied on a diverse set of sanctions to deter companies from engaging in anti-competitive behaviour. In contrast the EU competition law regime has so far focused on ever increasing levels of corporate fines, stemming to a large extent from the Commission's desire to increase deterrence.
However, a growing number of voices are questioning whether increasing the level of corporate fines is indeed the most appropriate means for increasing deterrence. Other criticisms of the EU's sanctioning regime allege a high level of uncertainty, raise questions about its compatibility with international instruments protecting due process, criticise its lack of consideration for corporate compliance programs and the quasi-automatic finding of parental liability. A key criticism laments the absence of individual sanctions targeting the individuals who are the perpetrators of an antitrust violation.
- published: 11 Jan 2013
- views: 77
3:31
Research Handbook on International Competition Law
BOOK REVIEW
RESEARCH HANDBOOK ON INTERNATIONAL COMPETITION LAW
Edited by Ariel Ezrachi
...
published: 23 Jan 2013
Research Handbook on International Competition Law
BOOK REVIEW
RESEARCH HANDBOOK ON INTERNATIONAL COMPETITION LAW
Edited by Ariel Ezrachi
Edward Elgar Publishing Limited
ISBN: 978 0 85793 479 6
www.e-elgar.com
COMPETITION LAW AND THE DYNAMICS OF INTERNATIONAL CO-OPERATION AND NATIONAL ENFORCEMENT DISCUSSED IN 22 LEARNED ARTICLES
An appreciation by Phillip Taylor MBE and Elizabeth Taylor of Richmond Green Chambers
Some thirty leading scholars, academics and practitioners have contributed twenty-two formidably thoughtful and readable articles to this scholarly and topical book on competition law.
Like many a work of research from the Edward Elgar publishing house, the international dimension is stressed; in this case for fairly obvious reasons. Competition has to prevail in a healthy, consumer-friendly economy and legal measures to curb anti-competitive activity which impedes or stifles it must be implemented and enforced. However, the mind-blowingly Byzantine complexity of the processes involved and the resulting pitfalls, problems and possible solutions reveal themselves in this book.
The paradox central to competition law, or should we say in-built difficulty that attends it -- is the wobbly alignment, or often non-alignment of what the book's editor Ariel Ezrachi (Director of the University of Oxford Centre for Competition Law and Policy), refers to as 'the dynamics of international cooperation and national enforcement'.
'While many markets are already cross-border, for the most part, legal systems are national.' says Philip Marsden, one of the contributors, Well, no surprise there of course, but therein lies the continuing dilemma that plagues competition lawyers and indeed anyone involved professionally in competition law.
What competition lawyers -- especially those in comparative law have to grapple with, says Marsden is a 'patchwork' of national regimes in a world of increasingly globalized markets, which can result in a failure to address such anti-competitive behaviour, as cartels, anti-competitive mergers and other private restrictions, with the resulting burdens almost inevitably passed on to consumers.'
In all, the book contains an extensive, thoroughly researched and meticulously footnoted selection of articles, designed to deliver much of the latest insights and perspectives on competition law worldwide.
The wide range of subject matter extends from enforcement trends and advocacy, to competition law as it impinges on intellectual property and the pharmaceutical industry, to name only a few examples of the areas discussed. Especially useful for researchers are the extensive tables of cases and instruments from a range of jurisdictions worldwide. The more than 20 page index at the back aids navigation through the varied contents.
As trade inevitably creeps across borders in a continually shrinking world, this book should be of abiding interest to competition lawyers everywhere as well as scholars, academics and competition officials and policy makers in trading nations. The subject matter is international and so is the book's utility and appeal.
- published: 23 Jan 2013
- views: 19
5:04
Joseph E. Harrington on Deterring EU Competition Law Infringements. INTERVIEW
Joseph E. Harrington (Professor of Economics, Wharton School - University of Pennsylvania ...
published: 11 Jan 2013
Joseph E. Harrington on Deterring EU Competition Law Infringements. INTERVIEW
Joseph E. Harrington (Professor of Economics, Wharton School - University of Pennsylvania and Universidad Carlos III de Madrid) asserts that a joint enterprise between academia and the competition authorities could give us real insight into whether our current policies are actually reducing the number of cartels.
In a conference organised on 3 December in Brussels, the Tilburg Law & Economics Centre (TILEC) and the Liège Competition Innovation Institute (LCII), prominent academics, regulators and practitioners discussed differing approaches to sanctions in competition law. The high-level full-day conference "Deterring Competition Law Infringements: Are We Using the Right Sanctions" was designed to bring detailed analysis and up-to-date knowledge about emerging trends in optimal deterrence and sanctions. The results contained in these interviews send a signal on the need for a modern approach to cartel sanctioning policies and procedures in order to achieve the EU's stated goal of higher deterrence.
Competition law regimes across the world have typically relied on a diverse set of sanctions to deter companies from engaging in anti-competitive behaviour. In contrast the EU competition law regime has so far focused on ever increasing levels of corporate fines, stemming to a large extent from the Commission's desire to increase deterrence.
However, a growing number of voices are questioning whether increasing the level of corporate fines is indeed the most appropriate means for increasing deterrence. Other criticisms of the EU's sanctioning regime allege a high level of uncertainty, raise questions about its compatibility with international instruments protecting due process, criticise its lack of consideration for corporate compliance programs and the quasi-automatic finding of parental liability. A key criticism laments the absence of individual sanctions targeting the individuals who are the perpetrators of an antitrust violation.
- published: 11 Jan 2013
- views: 58
3:59
Eddy de Smijter on Deterring EU Competition Law Infringements. INTERVIEW
Eddy De Smijter (DG Competition) on fines as the EU's only tool for deterrence and whether...
published: 11 Jan 2013
Eddy de Smijter on Deterring EU Competition Law Infringements. INTERVIEW
Eddy De Smijter (DG Competition) on fines as the EU's only tool for deterrence and whether increasing the threshold with other sanctions would improve deterrence.
In a conference organised on 3 December in Brussels, the Tilburg Law & Economics Centre (TILEC) and the Liège Competition Innovation Institute (LCII), prominent academics, regulators and practitioners discussed differing approaches to sanctions in competition law. The high-level full-day conference "Deterring Competition Law Infringements: Are We Using the Right Sanctions" was designed to bring detailed analysis and up-to-date knowledge about emerging trends in optimal deterrence and sanctions. The results contained in these interviews send a signal on the need for a modern approach to cartel sanctioning policies and procedures in order to achieve the EU's stated goal of higher deterrence.
Competition law regimes across the world have typically relied on a diverse set of sanctions to deter companies from engaging in anti-competitive behaviour. In contrast the EU competition law regime has so far focused on ever increasing levels of corporate fines, stemming to a large extent from the Commission's desire to increase deterrence.
However, a growing number of voices are questioning whether increasing the level of corporate fines is indeed the most appropriate means for increasing deterrence. Other criticisms of the EU's sanctioning regime allege a high level of uncertainty, raise questions about its compatibility with international instruments protecting due process, criticise its lack of consideration for corporate compliance programs and the quasi-automatic finding of parental liability. A key criticism laments the absence of individual sanctions targeting the individuals who are the perpetrators of an antitrust violation.
- published: 11 Jan 2013
- views: 53