Abstract
In 2013 the EU Commission issued a Recommendation and a Communication on collective redress. This article reviews the provisions on legal standing and the funding of collective compensatory litigation by representative entities. It finds that the proposals fail to meet the goal to compensate victims of competition restraining behaviour and affects the goals of tort law detrimentally.
Published Online: 2015-8-21
Published in Print: 2015-8-1
© 2015 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston
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Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Frontmatter
- Articles
- Atomised Losses in Tort Law: Conceptual Difficulties and Modern Developments
- Distributed Damage: A South African and Common Law Perspective
- Injunctive and Compensatory Collective Redress Mechanisms against Restraints of Competition and Unfair Trade Practices
- Dispersed Losses in Tort Law – An Economic Analysis
- Book Reviews
- Allan Beever, The Law of Private Nuisance (Hart, 2013). xiv+ 180pp. ISBN 9781849465069. £35 (hardback).
- Paula Giliker, The Europeanisation of English Tort Law (Hart, 2014). xxxvi + 226 pp. ISBN 9781849463195. £45 (hardback).
Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Frontmatter
- Articles
- Atomised Losses in Tort Law: Conceptual Difficulties and Modern Developments
- Distributed Damage: A South African and Common Law Perspective
- Injunctive and Compensatory Collective Redress Mechanisms against Restraints of Competition and Unfair Trade Practices
- Dispersed Losses in Tort Law – An Economic Analysis
- Book Reviews
- Allan Beever, The Law of Private Nuisance (Hart, 2013). xiv+ 180pp. ISBN 9781849465069. £35 (hardback).
- Paula Giliker, The Europeanisation of English Tort Law (Hart, 2014). xxxvi + 226 pp. ISBN 9781849463195. £45 (hardback).