ANTITRUST LAW

antitrust law.

1. The body of law designed to protect trade and commerce from restraints, monopolies, price-fixing, and price discrimination. • The principal federal antitrust laws are the Sherman Act (15 USCA §§ 1–7) and the Clayton Act (15 USCA §§ 12–27).

“As legislative history and case law both disclose, the general objective of the antitrust laws is the maintenance of competition. Competition per se thus becomes a goal of the legal order. Yet, competition is not a concept which defines itself; notions about the desirability of competition may shape judgments about how the law should apply, at least at its indistinct edges.” Lawrence A. Sullivan, Handbook of the Law of Antitrust § 5, at 20 (1977).

2. (cap.) SHERMAN ANTITRUST ACT.


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