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Private Rights of Action: How Consumers, Workers, and Businesses are Fighting Corporate Power

From filling a prescription to browsing the internet, consumers, small businesses, and workers alike are feeling the burden of consolidated markets. In recent years, we have seen a reinvigoration of antitrust enforcement across federal and state agencies, spurred by a broad executive order on competition. But this antitrust revival reaches far beyond government efforts.

Widespread abuses of corporate power require widespread forms of accountability. The antitrust private right of action is just that. Antitrust cases brought by consumers, workers, and businesses themselves are a crucial complement to public enforcement efforts. Class action litigation, in particular, is a critical tool for countering corporate power. Today, private enforcers are taking on some of the largest firms in the nation, including Google, Amazon, and Facebook. They are stepping up against abuses of power by regional healthcare systems, grocery chains, EpiPen producers, meat packers, and landlords using algorithmic rent-fixing software.

Join COSAL and the American Economic Liberties Project for a virtual conversation on the ways in which the private sector is tackling corporate power on March 20 at 2:00 PM ET. We will hear from a panel of seasoned antitrust lawyers who are leading many of these battles in the courtroom and discuss the unique challenges private litigants face and how to address them.

Register here.

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March 27

COSAL Northeast Regional Event at NYU School of Law