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Minh Dang

Minh Dang

Mr

  • LAW

Personal profile

Biography

Minh is a Postgraduate Researcher in competition law at the University of East Anglia. In his doctoral thesis, Minh adopts interdisciplinary and comparative approaches to explore the efficiency considerations in merger control. He is particularly interested in the US, EU, UK, Canada, and South Africa competition law. Minh's research focuses on competition law and policy, mergers and acquisitions, industrial organization, law and economics, competition and innovation, EU and comparative law.

Minh has a background in law and business administration from the Ho Chi Minh City University of Law (LLB, BBA). He holds an LLM in International Commercial and Business Law (Distinction) from the University of East Anglia. He was awarded a School of Law Studentship and the Faculty of Social Sciences SSF PGR Conference and Training Fund for his PhD studies.

 

Key Research Interests

competition law and policy, mergers and acquisitions, industrial organization, law and economics, competition and innovation, EU and comparative law.

Research Group or Lab Membership

Centre for Competition Policy (CCP)

Competition Law Association (CLA), British Group of the Ligue Internationale du Droit de la Concurrence (International League for Competition Law)

TechnoLawgy Collective Research Group

Academic Background

International Commercial and Business Law LLM (Distinction)

LLB

BBA

BA(ELL)

Teaching Interests

Minh is an Associate Fellow of the Higher Education Academy and has experience teaching core LLB modules as well as competition law, including the economics of competition law and regulations. He has also been giving guest lectures in many seminaries, including UEA's LLB Competition Law and the University of Glasgow's LLM in International Merger Control.

Education/Academic qualification

Keywords

  • Competition, Markets and Regulation
  • Competition law
  • Competition policy
  • innovation
  • Digital markets regulation
  • Merger Control
  • European Union Law
  • Inequality
  • Industrial Economics
  • innovation