A paper written with Julien Pillot in the last issue of the Journal of Innovation Ecoconomics, titled :
"Intellectual
Property Rights, Interoperability and Compulsory Licensing: Merits and
Limits of the European approach "
An abstract : The Essential Facilities Doctrine, albeit an American
case-law creation, is also implemented in the European Union. While, since Trinko (2004), the US Supreme Court
seems to challenge its implementation, European antitrust authorities tend to
extend this doctrine to intangible assets. Focusing on European case-law, we
observe several differences between American and European competition policies.
This article highlights these dissimilarities - which are going much further
than the sole implementation of the EFD - and underlines both the principles
and the limits of the European approach. As a final purpose, this work tries to
point up some of these differences’ origins. In this way, we argue that, if the
US and the EU antitrust authorities are consistent with their respective
conceptions of competition, these policies are not neutral on the innovation
incentives.
“Intellectual Property Rights, Interoperability and Compulsory
Licensing: Merits and Limits of the European approach”, avec Julien Pillot, Journal of Innovation Economics, volume
9, n°1-2012, pp.35-61.
Available on Cairn : http://www.cairn.info/revue-journal-of-innovation-economics-2012-1.htm
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