Due Process in Antitrust Proceedings Before the European Commission: Fundamental Rights are Not Enough (Competition Policy International)

In 2011, the European Court of Human Rights issued its widely noted Menarini judgment, stating that an administrative body may impose competition law penalties (which constitute criminal law sanctions) without infringing Article 6 ECHR, as long as the parties have the possibility to appeal such decisions before a tribunal with …read more

Source: Global Competition Law Blogs

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OSCOLA

21st Century Competition, 'Due Process in Antitrust Proceedings Before the European Commission: Fundamental Rights are Not Enough (Competition Policy International)' (21st Century Competition, 13 June 2014) <https://www.twentyfirstcenturycompetition.com/2014/06/due-process-in-antitrust-proceedings-before-the-european-commission-fundamental-rights-are-not-enough-competition-policy-international/> accessed 25 April 2026.

Chicago

21st Century Competition. "Due Process in Antitrust Proceedings Before the European Commission: Fundamental Rights are Not Enough (Competition Policy International)." 21st Century Competition, 13 June 2014. https://www.twentyfirstcenturycompetition.com/2014/06/due-process-in-antitrust-proceedings-before-the-european-commission-fundamental-rights-are-not-enough-competition-policy-international/.

BibTeX

@misc{21st-century-competition2014, author = {21st Century Competition}, title = {{Due Process in Antitrust Proceedings Before the European Commission: Fundamental Rights are Not Enough (Competition Policy International)}}, year = {2014}, url = {https://www.twentyfirstcenturycompetition.com/2014/06/due-process-in-antitrust-proceedings-before-the-european-commission-fundamental-rights-are-not-enough-competition-policy-international/}, note = {21st Century Competition} }
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