Who are we?

Creator and director of the Network Law Review

The Network Law Review (formerly Concurrentialiste) was created, and is directed, by Thibault SchrepelAssociate Professor of Law at VU Amsterdam, and Faculty Affiliate at Stanford University’s CodeX Center where he has created the “Computational Antitrust” project that brings together over 65 antitrust agencies (see the project). He also holds research and teaching positions at the University Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne and Sciences Po Paris; he is a Harvard University’s Berkman Center alumnus, a French Superior Audiovisual Council scientific board member, and an expert appointed to the World Economic Forum and the World Bank.

In 2018, Thibault was granted the “Academic Excellence” Global Competition Review Award, which recognizes “an academic competition specialist who has made an outstanding contribution to competition policy.” He has published a first book (Bruylant ed.) on the subject of “predatory innovation in antitrust law” and articles at Harvard University, Stanford, MIT, Oxford, NYU, Berkeley, and Georgetown, among others (see here).

Thibault has been focusing most of his research on blockchain antitrust (see here). He has written the world’s most downloaded antitrust articles of 2018 (“The Blockchain Antitrust Paradox”), 2019 (“Collusion by Blockchain and Smart Contracts”), and 2021 (“Computational Antitrust: An Introduction and Research Agenda”). His latest book, “Blockchain + Antitrust”, was published in September 2021.

Coordinating publications for the Network Law Review
 
Anouk is a Ph.D. researcher in Competition Law at the European University Institute in Florence. Her research focuses on the static vs. dynamic competition debate. More specifically, she studies whether the current methods underlying a competition law assessment are static and should change to account for dynamic competition.
 
Before joining the European University Institute, Anouk worked as a junior researcher at Utrecht University on a study for the Dutch Ministry of Justice and Security. She holds an LL.M. in Law and Economics and Corporate Law from Utrecht University. Her master thesis was nominated for the Concurrences Antitrust Writing Awards 2021 (see here).