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ORCID

Oles Andriychuk: 0000-0003-2863-9140

Keywords

competition law, sustainable development, legal philosophy, balancing, in-/commensurability, EU law, legal realism

Abstract

This article explores the role of sustainability in EU competition law from the perspective of the theory of legal realism. It addresses the issue by analysing three interrelated themes. It first outlines the main normative and methodological arguments of the protagonists and the opponents of a more societally engaged account of competition policy. Such an account pleads for a more permissive interpretation of competition rules. Secondly, it develops an account of competition law, basing on the premises of the legal realist tradition, adjusting legal realism to the needs and specificities of our field and our time, and submitting that this legal philosophical theory is well-suited for capturing the present discussion. Finally, it projects this jurisprudential theory of legal realism to an applied dimension, offering an outline of the central theoretical issue of a more societally inclusive EU competition policy: the issue of balancing incommensurable values.

First Page

11

Last Page

38

Page Count

27

Received Date

15.03.2021

Accepted Date

26.04.2021

DOI

10.7172/1689-9024.YARS.2021.14.23.1

Publisher

University of Warsaw

Publication Date

2021-09-15

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