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Eric A. Posner

    5 dicembre 1965

    Eric Posner è un professore di diritto presso l'Università di Chicago. Il suo lavoro approfondisce una vasta gamma di argomenti legali, tra cui il diritto internazionale, il diritto contrattuale e l'analisi costi-benefici. Posner esplora l'interazione tra legge e norme sociali, cercando di comprendere i limiti del diritto internazionale nel panorama globale contemporaneo. La sua ricerca si concentra sulle sfide attuali nel diritto internazionale, nel diritto dell'immigrazione e nelle relazioni estere.

    How Antitrust Failed Workers
    Radical Markets
    The Demagogue's Playbook
    • 2021

      "Antitrust law has very rarely been used by workers to challenge anticompetitive employment practices. Yet recent empirical research shows that labor markets are highly concentrated, and that employers engage in practices that harm competition and suppress wages. These practices include no-poaching agreements, wage-fixing, mergers, covenants not to compete, and misclassification of gig workers as independent contractors. This failure of antitrust to challenge labor-market misbehavior is due to a range of other failures-intellectual, political, moral, and economic. And the impact of this failure has been profound for wage levels, economic growth, and inequality. In light of the recent empirical work, it is urgent for regulators, courts, lawyers, and Congress to redirect antitrust resources to labor market problems. This book offers a strategy for judicial and legislative reform"-- Provided by publisher

      How Antitrust Failed Workers
    • 2020

      The Demagogue's Playbook

      • 320pagine
      • 12 ore di lettura

      What - and who - is a demagogue? How did America's Founders envision the presidency? What should a constitutional democracy look like - and how can it be fixed when it appears to be broken?

      The Demagogue's Playbook
    • 2018

      Radical Markets

      • 384pagine
      • 14 ore di lettura

      Revealing bold new ways to structure markets for the good of everyone, this book shows how the emancipatory force of genuinely open, free, and competitive markets can reawaken the dormant 19th-century spirit of liberal reform and lead to greater equality, prosperity, and cooperation.

      Radical Markets