Contents :PrefacePaul Nihoul and Tadeusz SkocznyPART I FAIRNESS AND EFFECTIVENESS IN ANTITRUST PROCEEDINGS 1. Substance and Process in Competition Law and Enforcement. Why We Should Care If It's Not FairCaron Beaton-Wells2. Effectiveness through Fairness? 'Due Process' as an Institutional Precondition to Effective Decentralised EU Competition Law EnforcementPieter Van Cleynenbreugel3. "Human Rights" Protection for Corporate Antitrust Defendants: Are We Not Going Overboard? Albert Sanchez Graells and Francisco Marcos4. The Emergence of a WTO Antitrust Jurisprudence through Cross-fertilisation from other International Antitrust Regimes: The Case for Procedural Fairness as a Necessary PreconditionAmedeo ArenaPART II RIGHT TO DEFENSE AND RIGHT TO BE HEARD5. Procedural Powers in Competition Enforcement: A Look at InspectionsMaria De Benedetto6. The Role of the Hearing Office in Antitrust Cases. A Critical Assessment of the New Mandate and Practice after 2011Giacomo Di Federico7. An Elusive Convergence - Rights of Defence in Competition Matters in the Jurisprudence of the CJEUKrystyna Kowalik-Banczyk 8. Fairness and Access to Information: Private Enforcement vs Public EnforcementClifford A. Jones9. State Aid and Fundamental Human Rights: State Aid Procedure and Procedural Fairness - A Contribution to the Right to Participate DebateLubos Tichy and Petra Joanna PipkovaPART III RIGHT TO JUDICIAL REVIEW10. Competition Law Enforcement: Administrative versus Judicial SystemsDaniel Zimmer11. American Debate: Single Agency or Multiple Enforcement Agencies and Whether Administrative Procedures are FairAlbert Foer12. The Right of Fair Trial in Competition Law Proceedings; Quo vadis the Courts of the New EU Member States? Marco Botta and Alexandr Svetlicinii13. Deferential Standard of Judicial Review in Competitions Proceedings and the Article 6 of the European Convention on Human RightsMaciej Bernatt Discussion Report (CARS)Fairness And Effectiveness In Antitrust ProceedingsIndex