Prof. Mike Carrier published “A Simple Solution to the Problem of ‘Product Hopping’” in the Harvard Health Policy Review. The piece explains why legislation addressing product hopping, in which brand-name drug companies switch from one version of a drug to another just to keep the generic off the market, is the best option to address … Continue reading Prof. Mike Carrier publishes article in Harvard Health Policy Review…
Author: Michael Carrier
Prof. Michael Carrier’s research cited in Supreme Court opinion
In NCAA v. Alston, the Supreme Court, in a 9-0 opinion written by Justice Gorsuch, ruled in favor of student-athletes and against the NCAA on the issue of whether the restriction of education-related benefits violated antitrust law. The Court’s opinion was consistent with several of the points Prof. Michael Carrier and Chris Sagers made in … Continue reading Prof. Michael Carrier’s research cited in Supreme Court opinion…
Prof. Michael Carrier’s work cited in Supreme Court opinion
In NCAA v. Alston, the Supreme Court, in a 9-0 opinion written by Justice Gorsuch, ruled in favor of student-athletes and against the NCAA on the issue of whether the restriction of education-related benefits violated antitrust law. The Court’s opinion was consistent with several of the points Prof. Michael Carrier and Chris Sagers made in … Continue reading Prof. Michael Carrier’s work cited in Supreme Court opinion…
Prof. Michael Carrier co-authors essay in Iowa Law Review
Prof. Michael Carrier and Rebecca Tushnet published “An Antitrust Framework for False Advertising” in the Iowa Law Review. The essay offers a new antitrust framework for false advertising claims, including a presumption that monopolists engaging in false advertising violate antitrust law. https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3593914
Prof. Michael Carrier co-authors Law360 standard-setting piece
Prof. Michael Carrier and Brian Scarpelli published “How Standard-Setting Organizations Can Curb Patent Litigation” in Law 360. The piece showed how the clarity of organization rules can affect the likelihood of patent litigation. https://www.law360.com/articles/1392222/how-standard-setting-orgs-can-curb-patent-litigation