News | May 8, 2026
A recent study by Tatyana Avilova, Economist at Secretariat has been selected by the Editor of JAMA Health Forum as an Editor’s Choice: Clinical Trial of 2025.
April 13, 2026
Secretariat is pleased to announce the latest issue of Economists Ink. This publication includes insights from leading economists about recent developments in law and economics that may significantly impact the field.
This issue explores recent topics in the economics of AI-based discrimination, antitrust remedies in Big Tech, market definition in the cannabis industry, and the evolving antitrust allegations in college athletics.
In the first article, Drs. Stuart Gurrea and Nicolas Suarez explore how economists may approach class-action litigation claims of discrimination involving AI-driven hiring and selection tools. They evaluate the circumstances under which such algorithmic systems might not form a common policy sufficient to support class certification and consider the implications for future AI-related class-wide litigation.
In the second article, Dr. Stephanie Khoury examines the proposed settlement in Epic v. Google, which includes revisions to the court-ordered injunction intended to open the Android app ecosystem to meaningful competition. The article highlights judicial and third-party concerns that the proposed changes may fall short of providing an adequate remedy and underscores the importance of market-wide economic considerations in shaping effective relief.
In the third article, Dr. Jéssica Dutra analyzes the evolving competitive landscape of the U.S. cannabis industry as more states adopt cannabis laws. She discusses how federal prohibition under the Controlled Substances Act (CSA) alongside state-specific regulatory frameworks have produced fragmented markets with localized supply chains without interstate commerce. She also considers the implications for competition policy, including market concentration and geographic market definition in retail cannabis markets.
Finally, Dr. Kira Stearns examines how prior NIL and revenue sharing settlements in college athletics may have shaped economic incentives contributing to the recent increase in antitrust allegations against the NCAA.
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A recent study by Tatyana Avilova, Economist at Secretariat has been selected by the Editor of JAMA Health Forum as an Editor’s Choice: Clinical Trial of 2025.
Secretariat Experts Recognized in Lexology’s 2026 Investigations Report
Ten of Secretariat experts have been recognized in the Lexology Index 2026 Investigations report, produced in partnership with Global Investigations Review. The guide highlights leading investigations lawyers, digital forensic specialists, and forensic accountants who are trusted to support the most demanding matters worldwide.
AI is rapidly reshaping how financial institutions in Latin America approach compliance, shifting from reactive monitoring to proactive financial crime detection. Advanced AI platforms specialized in crime detection enable banks to process vast datasets, identify anomalous behaviors, and map hidden relationships across accounts and jurisdictions. This is particularly relevant in a region characterized by complex cross-border flows, uneven regulatory enforcement, and significant exposure to illicit economies.