
Biography
Louis is a PhD candidate at King’s College London, fully funded by the Dickson Poon School of Law. His research concerns European Union Competition Law, with a focus on anticompetitive unilateral conduct in digital environments.
Alongside his studies, Louis works as a teacher for European Union law at King's College London.
Louis holds a Staatsexamen from Johannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz, Germany, as well as an International Commercial Law LLM from the University of Glasgow.
PhD Thesis
Abuse Beyond Markets: Anticompetitive Leveraging Strategies in Digital Ecosystems under Art. 102 TFEU
Supervisors
Professor Alison Jones (first)
Dr Andriani Kalintiri (second)
Research Interests
- Competition Law
- Unfair Commercial Practices
- Digital Markets and Ecosystems
- Artificial Intelligence
Teaching
European Union Law
Research

Centre of European Law
Founded in 1974, The Centre of European Law (CEL) is one of the oldest research centres of its kind. We are known around the world as research leaders in European law – a role that is even more crucial in the current political climate.

Competition Law and Economic Regulation
Our expertise includes: the law, economics, and politics of competition policy and economic regulation in the EU, UK, US, and elsewhere. As researchers we are interested in a broad array of competition and regulatory issues. Our work aims to encourage reflection upon how certain provisions should and do operate, as well as fundamental reinterpretations of the way whole regimes should operate.
Research

Centre of European Law
Founded in 1974, The Centre of European Law (CEL) is one of the oldest research centres of its kind. We are known around the world as research leaders in European law – a role that is even more crucial in the current political climate.

Competition Law and Economic Regulation
Our expertise includes: the law, economics, and politics of competition policy and economic regulation in the EU, UK, US, and elsewhere. As researchers we are interested in a broad array of competition and regulatory issues. Our work aims to encourage reflection upon how certain provisions should and do operate, as well as fundamental reinterpretations of the way whole regimes should operate.