Anticipating a trade and competition agenda for the World Trade Organi
zation, Professor Fox analyzes the international dimension of private
restraints of trade and argues that liberalized world trade calls for
a symbiotic liberal competition principle assuring no unreasonable res
traint of market access. She proposes that all nations adopt a nonparo
chial antitrust law prohibiting unreasonable bars to market access, an
d a procedural system assuring victims' rights of enforcement; and she
contemplates solving the problem of varying national formulations by
a choice-of-law principle.