ABA JOURNAL — Jonathan Gleklen wanted to do something a little different during his year as chair of the ABA Antitrust Law Section. In the past, the section’s task forces typically studied current issues, such as the use of the consumer welfare standard in antitrust law, and published scholarly reports. But Gleklen, who began his term in August, proposed instead that the section create a task force to develop an open source antitrust casebook for law school students.“Antitrust lawyers spend their time thinking about barriers to entry, competition and prices,” says Gleklen, a partner in Arnold & Porter Kaye Scholer’s Washington, D.C., office. “If we want to lower the barriers to becoming an antitrust lawyer and diversify our profession, an antitrust lawyer knows that a good way to do it is to lower the cost of entry.” Gleklen explains that traditional antitrust casebooks cost as much as $300, which likely discourages some law students from exploring this area of the law. Open source casebooks, on the other hand, are available online and can be downloaded for free or printed on demand for a significantly lower price.