Professor Svetiev joined the Brooklyn Law School faculty in the Spring of 2008. He
writes and teaches in the areas of antitrust law, contracts and intellectual property.
His research explores how companies and regulators respond to the decentralization of
production relationships and the trend away from the vertically integrated model of the
business organization towards looser networks of independent collaborators. Professor
Svetiev recently published the article “Antitrust Governance.” Based on his dissertation
work at Columbia Law School, it examines the emergence of new governance remedial
mechanisms in antitrust intervention. At Columbia, he was an associate-in-law fellow,
teaching legal writing and co-teaching a course on contracts, collaboration and
interpretation with Professor Charles Sabel. While at law school, he taught game theory
and mathematical economics as an associate lecturer in economics. 

Professor Svetiev clerked for Justice Michael D. Kirby of the High Court of Australia –
the equivalent in that country of the U.S. Supreme Court. Prior to joining the BLS
faculty, he practiced as a litigation associate at Cravath, Swaine & Moore LLP in New
York 

Articles

Link

Antitrust Governance: The New Wave of Antitrust [Conference on Masushita at Twenty], 38 Loy. U. Chi. L.J. 593 (2007)
Antitrust law has entered a new phase of an always controversial existence. The role of...
 

Link

On Nagel and the Strategies for Judicial Candor, Austl. Rev. Pub. Aff. (2006)
 

Books

Comparative Economic Systems (with Tim E. Dixon) (1998)
 

Presentations

Citizens, Public Law and Market Power, Citizenship and Exclusion Conference at the London School of Economics (2000)
 

Other