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- Q4531178 description "Economics professor".
- Q4531178 description "Economics professor".
- Q4531178 subject Q5312304.
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- Q4531178 abstract "Kenneth G. Elzinga is the Robert C. Taylor Professor of Economics at the University of Virginia. His two major claims to fame are his antitrust expertise and his co-authorship of a highly successful trio of murder mystery novels in which the sleuth, dubbed Henry Spearman, solves the murder using principles of economics.Elzinga's antitrust expertise led the U.S. Supreme Court to its 5-4 decision on June 28, 2007, in Leegin Creative Leather Products, Inc. v. PSKS, Inc. that minimum retail pricing schemes, formerly treated automatically as illegal under the Sherman Antitrust Act, may offer benefits to consumers.His novels are written under the pseudonym Marshall Jevons, a mixture of economics pathfinders Alfred Marshall and William Stanley Jevons in collaboration with now-deceased Trinity University professor William L. Breit (1933-2011). The books are now assigned reading in many introductory college economics classes.".
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- Q4531178 name "Elzinga, Kenneth G.".
- Q4531178 shortDescription "Economics professor".
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- Q4531178 comment "Kenneth G. Elzinga is the Robert C. Taylor Professor of Economics at the University of Virginia. His two major claims to fame are his antitrust expertise and his co-authorship of a highly successful trio of murder mystery novels in which the sleuth, dubbed Henry Spearman, solves the murder using principles of economics.Elzinga's antitrust expertise led the U.S. Supreme Court to its 5-4 decision on June 28, 2007, in Leegin Creative Leather Products, Inc. v. PSKS, Inc.".
- Q4531178 label "Kenneth G. Elzinga".
- Q4531178 givenName "Kenneth G.".
- Q4531178 name "Elzinga, Kenneth G.".
- Q4531178 name "Kenneth G. Elzinga".
- Q4531178 surname "Elzinga".