ILSR Statement on the American Innovation and Choice Online Act Passing Out of the Senate
ILSR Co-Director Stacy Mitchell's statement on the American Innovation and Choice Online Act passing out of the Senate.
ILSR Co-Director Stacy Mitchell's statement on the American Innovation and Choice Online Act passing out of the Senate.
Amazon is exploiting its position as a gatekeeper to impose growing fees on the small businesses that rely on it to reach the online market.
Stacy Mitchell and business journalist Rana Foroohar teamed up for an Intelligence Squared debate to argue how Amazon is bad for small business.
A new report from the Institute for Local Self-Reliance (ILSR) examines Internet Service Providers’ (ISPs) transparency — or lack thereof — around the Internet service...
Ron Knox writes in The American Prospect about how decades of unchecked mergers has killed jobs, suppressed wages, and smothered independent businesses. But there's hope.
This statement was issued by ILSR's Stacy Mitchell in response to new amendments to an antitrust complaint filed against Amazon by D.C. AG Karl Racine.
For this episode of the Local Energy Rules Podcast, host John Farrell and guest Jean Su discuss how legal advocacy for energy democracy can overcome...
Stacy Mitchell joined the North American Hardware and Paint Association's Dan Tratensek to discuss the building momentum to level the playing field for small business.
President Biden signed a sweeping Executive Order aimed at undoing concentrated corporate control and ending decades of consolidation across the economy.
ILSR Co-Director Stacy Mitchell testified before the U.S. Congress Joint Economic Committee about how the U.S. has abandoned its antimonopoly policies, undermining independent businesses.
Biden's executive order marks a turning point in the fight against monopoly power. It includes more than 70 provisions, many of which reflect ILSR’s priorities.
After decades of a misguided approach to antitrust policy, Washington has a new antimonopoly fervor, writes Senior Researcher Ron Knox.
Today’s bipartisan vote in the House Judiciary Committee was a clear sign of the gathering momentum to break up Amazon and the other tech giants.
Our latest fact sheet shows that lawmakers cannot achieve their aim of restoring competition to our online markets without passing the structural separation bill.
On Capitol Forum's podcast Second Request, Senior Research Ron Knox chatted about music industry monopolies and how to restore the music industry's middle class.