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Wang Xiaoye Liber Amicorum
Concurrences - EAN : 9781939007711
Édition papier
EAN : 9781939007711
Paru le : 20 nov. 2019
215,00 €
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- EAN13 : 9781939007711
- Editeur : Concurrences
- Date Parution : 20 nov. 2019
- Disponibilite : Disponible
- Barème de remise : NS
- Nombre de pages : 316
- Format : H:152 mm L:229 mm E:24 mm
- Poids : 750gr
- Interdit de retour : Retour interdit
- Résumé : Without Professor Xiaoye Wang, Chinese competition law would not be in the shape it is today. Perhaps the key competition statute – the Anti-Monopoly Law (AML) – would not even have been enacted without her relentless efforts to push the competition law agenda in China. Professor Wang’s 70th birthday saw the tenth anniversary of the AML’s entry into force. It presents the ideal moment to take stock of what has been achieved in Chinese competition law over the past decade and to put the spotlight on Professor Wang’s significant contributions. In this Liber Amicorum, Professor Wang’s colleagues, friends, and admirers in China and around the world come together to celebrate her achievements to date and to discuss recent competition law developments in China and other timely topics. The variety of contributors’ backgrounds (academics, enforcers, lawyers, economists) demonstrates the abundance and range of the issues brought out in the book.
- Biographie : Wendy researches on competition law, focusing on international and comparative issues, law and development, and China. Her PhD, which examined the political economy of China’s competition law, received the Chancellor’s Prize for Excellence in the PhD Thesis and the Harold Luntz Graduate Research Price for the Best PhD Thesis. She teaches Chinese law, competition law, and corporate law. She is also a consultant to the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission on issues relating to competition law and development. Prior to academia, she practised as a lawyer for several years at leading law firms in Melbourne and New York, working in competition law and corporate law. Wendy has contributed several chapters to books on Chinese competition law and competition law and development, and presented her research at Australian and international conferences and seminars. She is also an editor of the China Competition Bulletin, a leading bimonthly publication on the latest developments in Chinese competition law and policy. In 2012, she was awarded a prestigious Prime Minister’s Australia Asia Award to support her fieldwork activities in China, where she was a visiting scholar at the University of the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Beijing.