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Competition Policy in America, 1888-1992Competition Policy in America, 1888-1992

Competition Policy in America, 1888-19921995

Rudolph J. R. Peritz

About this book

In Competition Policy in America, 1888-1992, Rudolph Peritz explores the durability of free competition imagery by tracing its influences on public policy. Looking at congressional debates and hearings, administrative agency activities, court opinions, arguments of counsel, and economic, legal, and political scholarship, he finds that free competition has actually evoked two different visions - freedom not only from oppressive government, but also from private economic power. He shows how the discourse of free competition has mediated between commitments to individual liberty and rough equality - themselves unstable over time. This rhetorical approach allows us to understand, for example, that the Reagan and Carter programs of deregulation, both inspired by the rhetoric of free competition, were driven by fundamentally different visions of political economy.

Details

First published
1995
OL Work ID
OL2914166W

Subjects

HistoryAntitrust lawCompetitionForest influencesForest HydrologyWatershed managementPeriodicalsWatershedsResearch

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Book data from Open Library. Cover images courtesy of Open Library.