Professor Andy Gavil is a member of the faculty of the Howard University School of Law in Washington, D.C., where he has taught antitrust law, civil procedure, civil rights litigation, complex litigation, federal courts, and federal regulation since 1989. He practiced antitrust law with law firms in Chicago and Denver from 1981-89 and is Of Counsel to Sonnenschein Nath & Rosenthal LLP, where he supports the antitrust counseling and litigation practice.
Professor Gavil has written, lectured, and commented on antitrust law and litigation, including exclusionary conduct by dominant firms, indirect purchaser rights, the role of expert economic testimony, burdens of production and proof, and the impact of the Supreme Court on the evolution of antitrust law. With William E. Kovacic and Jonathan B. Baker, he is the author of Antitrust Law in Perspective: Cases Concepts and Problems in Competition Policy (2d ed. 2008) and is currently at work with co-author Harry First on Microsoft and the Globalization of Competition Policy: A Study in Antitrust Institutions, which will be published by MIT Press.