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Pieter Bruegel, Big Fish Eat Little Fish, 16th century; Credit: https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/338694

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Credit:Pieter Bruegel, Big Fish Eat Little Fish, 16th century; Credit: https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/338694

The [F]law: Antitrust Law and Corporate Domination

September 5, 2022

Underpaid? And overpaying for everything from food and health care to beer and concert tickets? Luke Hinrichs reports on the costs of market concentration — and how antitrust needs to be reinvigorated to help dampen corporate power.

Read the article here.

Related SJP Resources

From The [F]law:

  • Shao Chang, Gig Economy and the Future of Work: Uber & Lyft’s race to the bottom–an opportunity to redefine work
  • Adriel Williams, The Costs of Carceral Communications: How a Prison Telecommunications Company Exploits Incarcerated People and Their Loved Ones
  • Julio Colby, Brave New Work: The Resurgence of Organized Labor in the U.S.: How corporations destroyed worker power, and how the pandemic might bring it back

 

From The Systemic Justice Journal:

  • Jun Yoon, Putting the ‘Anti’ Back into Antitrust: The Need for Antitrust Reform in the Digital Age
  • Elizabeth MeLampy, Fowl Play: Corporate Law and the Chicken Industry

Key Data

Photo Caption Pieter Bruegel, Big Fish Eat Little Fish, 16th century; Credit: https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/338694
In Categories: Blog Capture Corporate Power Economic Injustice Labor The [F]law
In Tags: antitrust capitalism corporate power
In Subject Areas: Antitrust & Anticorruption Economic Injustice Labor Politics & Democracy
In Intersections: Wealth / Income Justice

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