|
Definition of Antitrust legislation
1. Noun. Law intended to promote free competition in the market place by outlawing monopolies.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Antitrust Legislation
Literary usage of Antitrust legislation
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Trust Laws and Unfair Competition by United States Bureau of Corporations, Joseph E. Davies (1916)
"STATE antitrust legislation.—It should be noted that State antitrust legislation,
which antedated Federal legislation on this subject, continued throughout ..."
2. Some Legal Phases of Corporate Financing, Reorganization, and Regulation by Francis Lynde Stetson (1917)
"... March 22, 1916 THE Sixty-third Congress convened for its Second Session in
December, 1913, with antitrust legislation for its chief appointed work. ..."
3. Trust Legislation: Hearings Before the Committee on the Judiciary, House of by Henry De Lamar Clayton (1911)
"That brings up the whole question of antitrust legislation, which is too fundamental
for me to discuss now. I have taken as a fundamental premise that to ..."
4. Reports of the Department of Commerce and Labor 1904-1912: Report of the by Dept. of Commerce and Labor, United States (1905)
"A careful compilation and tabular summary has been made of all the Federal and
State "antitrust" legislation. The word "antitrust" in this connection has of ..."
5. Amendments to Sherman Antitrust Law and Related Matters by United States, Knute Nelson (1914)
"antitrust legislation. MAT 13, 1914.—Committed to the Committee of the Whole ...
While in all so-called antitrust legislation we must keep in mind the ..."
6. Economic History of the United States by Thurman William Van Metre (1921)
"Results of the Wilson antitrust legislation. The coming of the World War caused
such a complete readjustment of the economic organization of the United ..."
7. The Diseases of Society: The Vice and Crime Problem by George Frank Lydston (1906)
"We are just now in the midst of a Presidential and Congressional spasm of reform
in the way of antitrust legislation. How much of this is a conscientious ..."