David Evans is an authority on the economics of high technology and platform-based businesses, primarily as it relates to competition policy and intellectual property. He is the author of four books and more than 70 articles in journals ranging from the American Economic Review, Foreign Affairs, and The Yale Journal on Regulation. His many opinion pieces have appeared in newspapers around the world including the Washington Post, Wall Street Journal, Financial Times, Les Echos, and El Pais. A specialist on competition policy in the US and European Union, a topic on which he has written and lectured extensively, he has served as an expert and testified before courts, arbitrators, regulatory authorities and legislatures in the US and Europe. He has led the economic analysis in several important antitrust cases over the last 25 years including US v AT&T. Most recently, Dr. Evans has led an international economic team on a landmark series of cases involving a large global technology firm in the US and Europe.
From September 2004, he is visiting professor, Faculty of Laws, University College London. He was an adjunct professor of law at Fordham Law School from 1985-1995 where he taught antitrust law and economics. Dr. Evans has a Ph.D. from the University of Chicago. |