
In its own words, the mission of the International Competition Network (the ICN) is to advocate the adoption of "superior standards and procedures in competition policy around the world, formulate proposals for procedural and substantive convergence, and seek to facilitate effective international cooperation to the benefit of member agencies, consumers and economies worldwide." ICN members include nearly all competition authorities (NCAs) from around the world (over 100 of them). Since its inception, the ICN has also sought to enrich its discussions and outputs through the inclusion of non-governmental advisors (NGAs), principally large multi-nationals and the legal and economic professions. The ICN is a transnational network, set up by its members, largely without wider state input. This book hypothesises that the ICN's formally neutral structures provide powerful influence mechanisms for strong NCAs and NGAs, over the weak; and 'competition experts' over wider state interests, discussing the legitimacy of this from a political and legal theory perspective, analysing the ICN's effectiveness and efficiency, and suggesting ways that the ICN can improve all three. This study has important implications for the ICN itself, particularly as it launches its 'Third Decade Project', billed as a full self-evaluation. However, the story told here is also relevant to states and the wider regulatory community, due to the widespread use of transnational networks.
This book investigates whether the International Competition Network (ICN) functions as a neutral forum or as a mechanism for disproportionate influence by powerful competition authorities and non-governmental advisors. The authors, Christopher Townley, Mariana Tavares, and Mattia Guidi, utilize a framework rooted in legal and political theory to evaluate the ICN's internal dynamics. By analyzing the network's structure and output, they argue that the current model favors specific stakeholders over broader state interests and propose reforms to enhance the network's legitimacy, effectiveness, and efficiency.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts identify this work as a critical contribution to the study of transnational regulatory networks and informal governance. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which is intended for legal scholars, policymakers, and students of international political economy.
Page Count:
384
Publication Date:
2022-01-01
Publisher:
OUP Oxford
ISBN-10:
0192603612
ISBN-13:
9780192603616
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