- investigatory powers vested in competition authorities;
- the privilege against self-incrimination;
- right to privacy;
- fair trial probatory requirements;
- degree of use of presumptions in EU practice;
- Article 6 ECHR guarantees pertaining to the presumption of innocence;
- proving coordination of competitive behaviour;
- proving restriction of competition;
- admissibility of evidence before EU Courts and the Commission;
- assessment of the attribution of liability rules;
- EU fining rules;
- judicial review of cartel decisions by EU Courts; and
- national sanctioning rules.
The author's extraordinarily thorough presentation is rounded off with a remarkably comprehensive bibliography that lists (in addition to books and articles) newspaper articles, EU regulations and directives, soft-law guidelines and best practices, EU and ECtHR case law, EU Advocate General opinions, European Commission decisions, and European Ombudsman decisions.
General conclusions stress the necessity of introducing further reforms to enhance the effectiveness and legitimacy of fundamental rights in the context of competition proceedings. Few books have taken such a thorough and far-reaching approach to the reconciliation of effective public enforcement and fundamental rights, or of effective deterrence with the principles of legality, non-retroactivity, presumption of innocence, and ne bis in idem. In the depth of its appraisal of the entire spectrum of enforcement components from a fundamental rights perspective, the book is without peers. It will be warmly welcomed by any parties interested in the intersection of competition law and human rights.