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The 'Right to Damages' under EU Competition Law (European Monographs)
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Description
• the binding effect of competition authority decisions on a civil proceeding;
• the pass-on defence and standing of indirect purchasers;
• distinguishing between restitution and compensation;
• arguments defining the ‘right’ plaintiff’;
• national procedural autonomy;
• containing the ‘spill-over’ effect; and
• assessing a unified competition litigation system.
The discussion of these issues and others underscores their tendency, as the result of gradual judicial development, to make damages claims in the EU more likely to be brought, more likely to be won, and more beneficial to the plaintiff if won. The forceful implication is that these issues carry much broader implications than mere efficiency in the context of the competition rules; rather, they have a profound impact on the wider issues of access to justice and the right to a fair trial in the Union’s legal order. Through the perception of ‘private enforcement’ of EU competition law as an enduring legal and socio-political reality that is likely to remain, this book sheds new and powerful light on EU constitutional law and the ever-expanding influence of EU law on (largely national) private law. Although the practical availability of damages in national judicial fora is an issue which is still very far from being satisfactorily resolved, this far-reaching study reveals a trend that seems virtually inevitable, and will be of enormous interest to academics and policymakers concerned not only with competition law but with the very basis of EU law.














