Daniel A. Crane is the Frederick Paul Furth, Sr. Professor of Law at the University of Michigan Law School. He served as the Associate Dean for Faculty and Research from 2013 to 2016. Crane's work has appeared in the University of Chicago Law Review, the California Law Review, the Michigan Law Review, the Georgetown Law Journal, and the Cornell Law Review, among other journals. He is the author of several books on antitrust law, including Antitrust (Aspen, 2014), The Making of Competition Policy: Legal and Economic Sources (Oxford University Press, 2013), and The Institutional Structure of Antitrust Enforcement (Oxford University Press, 2011). William J. Novak is the Charles F. and Edith J. Clyne Professor of Law at the University of Michigan Law School. He is an award-winning legal scholar and historian, and is the author of The People's Welfare: Law and Regulation in Nineteenth-Century America (University of North Carolina Press, 1996) and New Democracy: The Creation of the Modern American State (Harvard University Press, 2022). He is also the co-editor of The Democratic Experiment (Princeton University Press, 2003), The State in U.S. History (University of Chicago Press, 2015), and The Corporation and American Democracy (Harvard University Press, 2017).
An essential guide to the history of the fight against monopoly in the United States, this remarkable book reveals that from the Boston Tea Party to today, the battle against monopoly has been a battle for freedom. * Luigi Zingales, Robert C. McCormack Distinguished Service Professor of Entrepreneurship and Finance, University of Chicago Booth School of Business * Antimonopoly and American Democracy is a scholarly, eminently readable, and wide-ranging treatment of Americans' understanding of the monopoly problem from the late-eighteenth to the mid-twentieth centuries. Its authors treat various markets and technologies, and from disciplines that are not limited to economics. In particular, this book addresses the heavy presence of antimonopoly rhetoric in the development of corporate law, antitrust, the law of regulated industries, and related concerns about federalism and international relations. An outstanding list of contributors explores these topics from every angle, emphasizing the extent to which monopoly was perceived as a threat to equality, economic participation and opportunity, and democracy itself. * Herbert Hovenkamp, James G. Dinan University Professor, University of Pennsylvania *