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[...] as Section VI argues, individual jurisdictions will adopt competition rules that are suboptimal from a global perspective. [...] by focusing attention on convergence, some commentators seem to have lost sight of one of the most remarkable developments of that last decade: the emergence of a global antitrust community with many shared values and a common language.
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Companies are commonly concerned about how to assure the success of their transactions. One of the most common concerns is related to the non-compete ...
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Staff writer
Chefs at the 10th annual Smoke on the Water Chili Cook-off follow the International Chili Society competition rules: First, no ingredients could be cooked prior to the cook-off.
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This paper offers a comparative analysis of three alternative theories of trade. The primary concentration of the paper is the Ricardian theory of comparative advantage. However, due to shortcomings, many attempts have been made to modify and/or redefine it. For Ricardo (2006), comparative advantage depended on relative differences in labor productivity resulting from differences in technology among nations. This was a major advancement to Adam Smith's vision that absolute cost differences would govern the movement of goods between nations. Eli Heckscher and Bertil Ohlin developed a neoclassical formulation of the principle of comparative advantage. The Heckscher-Ohlin factor-endowment model points to the central role of resource endowments as the basis of comparative cost differences a...
...For Smith (1998), international trade and specialization would be beneficial if on... regulates domestic transactions but also rules international trade. The same forces that guide do...
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The rules are different. The domestic opponents have changed. The international competition is stiffer.
For Jim Gruenwald, wrestling matches are no longer walks in the park.
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... reflect European Community antitrust (competition) standards. Those standards are generally more rig... States, the American Bar Association Model Rules of Professional Responsibility, Rule 1.1 states "A...
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... of a significant part of the background rules for the various relationships of their public live... is governed primarily by the norm of competition for market share that requires firms to innovate c... are implicitly recognized in all international commerce. . The globalization of trade, investment...
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Insurance markets have changed radically and deeply in the last 20 years. Deregulation, globalization of insurance institutions, intensified competition, electronic commerce, bancassurance, and the emergence of new risks are among the challenges faced by insurance markets. These developing trends pose both global and local challenges for insurance firms. The purpose of this article is to analyze the effect of globalization on international insurance markets. The focus is to highlight the global similarities of national insurance markets and the local contingencies that create differences among markets.
... is mainly underwritten under international rules, i.e., with international contract specifications ...
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... about the present and future of the international system. A robust conception of jus cogens assumes:... of jus cogens is so strong that general rules regarding the limits of an international tribunal'...As long as bipolar competition dominated international relations, sovereigns invo...
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... has been designed to facilitate fair competition in the electronic communications sector and consis...Following this, legislative rules and regulations were issued in order to have full ... equipment fulfils the national and international standards and supervise the use and running of suc...