Financial law: general Books

488 products


  • A Guide to the Anti-Tax Avoidance Directive

    Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd A Guide to the Anti-Tax Avoidance Directive

    Book SynopsisThis book provides a concise, practical guide to the European Union's Anti-Tax Avoidance Directive (ATAD). Presenting unique insights into the ATAD's five specific anti-avoidance rules, its chapters explain the background of those rules, the directive's interactions with relevant jurisprudence, and the challenges posed to the ATAD's interpretation and implementation in domestic law. Key features include: critical, article-by-article analysis of the ATAD contextual information on the legislative environment in which the ATAD operates, embedding it in the wider landscape of CJEU jurisprudence insights into the day-to-day application of the ATAD rules in practice contributions from leading academics and practitioners in the field of tax law examples of the challenges to the interpretation and implementation of ATAD, taken from a range of EU Member States. European and international tax advisors, along with policy makers in the field of tax law, will find this book to be a comprehensive yet accessible guide to the ATAD and its correct application. Those who carry out research in European tax law can also benefit from this book's critical approach to the ATAD and the questions that surround anti-tax avoidance legislation in the European Union. Contributors include: D. Gutmann, W. Haslehner, R. Ismer, B. Kuzniacki, K. Pantazatou, L. Parada, I. Richelle, A. Rust, P. Schwarz, K. Spies, B. van Raaij, F. VanistendaelTrade Review'This book is an excellent guide to the many difficult issues posed by the implementation of the ATAD, in which the authors successfully combine fundamental technical analysis with practical conclusions. With its clear structure and lucid writing, it will prove an invaluable resource for any tax practitioner who faces the challenge of navigating the multi-layered maze of anti-avoidance rules in the EU.' --Kees van Raad, International Tax Center Leiden, the NetherlandsTable of ContentsContents: 1. From Abuse to Base Erosion, How Did It Come to This? Frans Vanistendael 2. The General Scope of the ATAD and Its Position in the EU Legal Order Werner Haslehner 3. Abuse of Law as a General Principle of European Union (Tax) Law Roland Ismer 4. The Interest Limitation (Article 4 ATAD) Daniel Gutmann 5. The Exit Tax Rule (Article 5 ATAD) Paloma Schwarz 6. The GAAR (Article 6 ATAD) Błażej Kuźniacki 7. Controlled Foreign Company Rule (Articles 7 and 8 ATAD) Alexander Rust 8. Hybrid Financial Instruments and Anti-Hybrid Rules in the EU ATAD (Article 9 ATAD) Leopoldo Parada 9. Hybrid Entities and Anti-Hybrid Rules in the EU ATAD (Article 9 and 9a ATAD) Karoline Spies 10. ATAD, Double Taxation and Tax Dispute Resolution Isabelle Richelle 11. Effective Implementation of the ATAD: Information Collection, Exchange and Monitoring through DAC 6 Katerina Pantazatou 12. Where Do We Go From Here? – The Steady Move Towards a Common Corporate Tax Base Bart van Raaij Index

    £157.00

  • Digital Assets and Blockchain Technology: US Law

    Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Digital Assets and Blockchain Technology: US Law

    Book SynopsisThis textbook examines the legal and regulatory approaches to digital assets and related technology taken by United States regulators. As cryptoassets and other blockchain applications mature, and regulatory authorities work hard to keep pace, Daniel Stabile, Kimberly Prior and Andrew Hinkes invite students to consider the legal approaches, challenges and tension points inherent in regulating these new products and systems. The authors explore the attempts to apply securities laws and money transmission regulation, the growth of smart contracts, the taxation of digital assets, and the intersection of digital assets and criminal law. This innovative and unique textbook features: Commentary and analysis by three leading attorneys engaged with the regulation of digital assets and blockchain technology, offering practical, real-world acumen A comprehensive overview of the origins, key features and mechanisms of blockchain technology, as well as a broad intimation of the divisive debates that will shape the future of digital assets, to guarantee a thorough introduction to the topic for students Excerpts of authorities and other materials from key regulators, including the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, the Securities and Exchange Commission, the Commodities Futures Trade Commission, and the Internal Revenue Service, to add insight and nuance to classroom discussions. In this, the first textbook of its kind, students of law, business, or technology will find crucial insights into the law and regulation of blockchain and a comprehensive overview of significant public debates on the topic.Table of ContentsContents: 1. Introduction 2. Overview of Distributed Ledger Technology and Terminology 3. The Regulation of Virtual Currency Businesses 4. Fundraising and Securities 5. Offers and Sales of Tokens Under U.S. Securities Laws 6. Smart Contracts 7. The Taxation of Digital Assets 8. Virtual Currency and Criminal Law Index

    £166.00

  • Digital Assets and Blockchain Technology: US Law

    Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Digital Assets and Blockchain Technology: US Law

    Book SynopsisThis textbook examines the legal and regulatory approaches to digital assets and related technology taken by United States regulators. As cryptoassets and other blockchain applications mature, and regulatory authorities work hard to keep pace, Daniel Stabile, Kimberly Prior and Andrew Hinkes invite students to consider the legal approaches, challenges and tension points inherent in regulating these new products and systems. The authors explore the attempts to apply securities laws and money transmission regulation, the growth of smart contracts, the taxation of digital assets, and the intersection of digital assets and criminal law. This innovative and unique textbook features: Commentary and analysis by three leading attorneys engaged with the regulation of digital assets and blockchain technology, offering practical, real-world acumen A comprehensive overview of the origins, key features and mechanisms of blockchain technology, as well as a broad intimation of the divisive debates that will shape the future of digital assets, to guarantee a thorough introduction to the topic for students Excerpts of authorities and other materials from key regulators, including the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, the Securities and Exchange Commission, the Commodities Futures Trade Commission, and the Internal Revenue Service, to add insight and nuance to classroom discussions. In this, the first textbook of its kind, students of law, business, or technology will find crucial insights into the law and regulation of blockchain and a comprehensive overview of significant public debates on the topic.Table of ContentsContents: 1. Introduction 2. Overview of Distributed Ledger Technology and Terminology 3. The Regulation of Virtual Currency Businesses 4. Fundraising and Securities 5. Offers and Sales of Tokens Under U.S. Securities Laws 6. Smart Contracts 7. The Taxation of Digital Assets 8. Virtual Currency and Criminal Law Index

    £66.45

  • EU Regulation of E-Commerce: A Commentary

    Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd EU Regulation of E-Commerce: A Commentary

    Book SynopsisSignificantly revised and expanded, this important book addresses the key pieces of EU legislation in the field of e-commerce, including on consumer rights, copyright, electronic identification, open internet access, electronic payments, competition law and digital content.Key features of this second edition include: thoroughly up-to-date analysis of decisions of the Court of Justice and the Commission article-by-article commentary on the latest directives and regulations in the field of e-commerce a unique structure featuring detailed tables of cases and legislation and paragraph references, enabling easy access to all substantive legal provisions new chapters featuring analysis of services in the internal market, copyright in the Digital Single market, measures concerning open internet access and more. This unique work provides an updated account of the essential pieces of EU legislation on e-commerce. Legal practitioners will benefit from the clear structure and close examination of key provisions. The book will also appeal to legal scholars and advanced students, who will appreciate the concise overview and thoughtful analysis on future developments in the field.Trade Review‘EU Regulation of E-Commerce: A Commentary is an invaluable resource for researchers and students interested in the regulation of digital environments. This edited volume contains an impressive range of scholars, and depth of analysis. In a fast-moving field, this volume covers the most important European directives and regulations dealing with subjects that range from copyright to consumer protection. The editors are some of the most recognised scholars in the field, and this is a valuable addition to any library.’ -- Andres Guadamuz, University of Sussex, UK‘This is an important contribution to understanding the most important policy objective of the European Union: the growth of a safe and secure, trustworthy, and legally accountable framework for transactional e-Commerce, that respects not only fundamental rights but the private rights of stakeholders. An excellent range of contributors offers chapters, not only about the ex-ante rules and protections available for consumers, rightsholders, and the supply of digital content but the range of ex-post remedies and enforcement mechanisms available in the EU.' -- Mark Leiser, Leiden University, the NetherlandsTable of ContentsContents: Preface xix 1 The European Union and E-Commerce 1 Arno R. Lodder and Andrew D. Murray 2 Directive 2003/31/EC on Certain Legal Aspects of Information Society Services, in particular Electronic Commerce in the Internal Market 18 Arno R. Lodder 3 Directive 2001/29/EC on the Harmonisation of Certain Aspects of Copyright and Related Rights in the Information Society 64 Tatiana Eleni Synodinou 4 Directive 2006/123/EC on Services in the Internal Market 115 Martien Schaub 5 Directive 2011/83/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council of 25 October 2011 on Consumer Rights 152 Christiana Markou 6 Directive 2013/11/EU on Alternative Dispute Resolution for Consumers and Regulation (EC) 524/2013 on Online Dispute Resolution 223 Pablo Cortés 7 Regulation (EU) No 910/2014 on Electronic Identification and Trust Services for Electronic Transactions in the Internal Market (EIDAS Regulation) 248 Jos Dumortier 8 Regulation 2015/2120/EU Laying down Measure Concerning Open Internet Access 282 Andrew Murray 9 Directive 2019/790/EU (Directive on Copyright and Related Rights in the Digial Single Market) 309 Luke McDonagh 10 Directive (EU) 2019/770 on Certain Aspects Concerning Contracts for the Supply of Digital Content and Digital Services 335 Jorge Morais Carvalho 11 Regulation 2019/1150/EU on Promoting Fairness and Transparency for Business Users of Online Intermediation Services 365 Andrej Savin 12 Electronic Payments and Consumer Protection 387 Christine Riefa and Pamela Nika 13 E-commerce and EU Competition Law 428 Sonia Jóźwiak-Górny, Magdalena Jóźwiak and Artur Szmigielski Index

    £198.00

  • The UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human

    Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd The UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human

    Book SynopsisThis comprehensive Commentary provides an in-depth analysis of each of the 31 UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights, as well as the 10 Principles for Responsible Contracts. It engages in both a legal and contextual examination of the Principles alongside their application to real world practices at both the domestic and international levels.Key Features: One of the first detailed considerations of each of the Principles for Responsible Contracts Contributions from more than 40 leading international academics and practitioners in the field Discussion of legal and regulatory instruments as well as case law emanating from the Principles Offers information on interpreting, analysing, and using the UNGPs and the Principles for Responsible Contracts in a centralized accessible format. Practitioners, including government officials, who are responsible for corporate governance and human rights issues will find this Commentary invaluable for its systematic analysis of the obligations of both States and corporations. It will also be of interest to academics and those working for NGOs in the area of business and human rights, as well as businesses themselves looking to incorporate sustainability initiatives into their corporate practices.Trade Review‘The Commentary is a must-have for everyone who is working on business and human rights. The UNGPs constitute the base of all the work that has been done over the years in the field. Thus, to be able to comprehend what business and human rights mean and to build on them, it is essential to examine the UNGPs in detail, which is what the Commentary provides.’ -- Begüm Kilimcioglu, conflictoflaws.netTable of ContentsContents: Foreword by Surya Deva xxvi Acknowledgements xxix Table of cases xxxi Table of legislation xxxii The UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights and Principles for Responsible Contracts: An Introduction 1 Barnali Choudhury PART I THE UNITED NATIONS GUIDING PRINCIPLES ON BUSINESS AND HUMAN RIGHTS 1 Guiding Principle 1: Scope of Obligations 12 Daniel Augenstein 2 Guiding Principle 2: Expecting Business to Protect Human Rights 20 Claire Methven O’Brien 3 Guiding Principle 3: General State Regulatory and Policy Functions 28 Anil Yilmaz Vastardis and Rachel Chambers 4 Guiding Principle 4: The Obligations of States in Markets With Respect to Enterprises Owned, Controlled, or Supported by the State 35 Larry Catá Backer 5 Guiding Principle 5: The Content of the State Duty to Protect in the Context of Privatization 42 Humberto Cantú Rivera 6 Guiding Principle 6: Respecting Human Rights Through Commercial Transactions 49 Annamaria La Chimia 7 Guiding Principle 7: Supporting Business Respect for Human Rights in Conflict-Affected Areas 56 Olga Martin-Ortega and Fatimazahra Dehbi 8 Guiding Principle 8: Ensuring Policy Coherence 63 Jena Martin 9 Guiding Principle 9: Domestic Policy 70 Carolina Olarte-Bácares 10 Guiding Principle 10: States as Members of Multilateral Institutions 77 Gamze Erdem Türkelli 11 Guiding Principle 11: The responsibility of business enterprises to respect human rights 85 Sara L. Seck 12 Guiding Principle 12: Minimum Human Rights Standards for Pillar II 92 Sarah Joseph 13 Guiding Principle 13: Responsibility of the Business Sector 101 Kishanthi Parella 14 Guiding Principle 14: Nature and Size of the Business Enterprise 109 Kishanthi Parella 15 Guiding Principle 15: Businesses Implementing Policies and Practices 113 Kishanthi Parella 16 Guiding Principle 16: Policy Commitments 118 Maddalena Neglia 17 Guiding Principle 17: Human Rights Due Diligence 126 Robert McCorquodale and Cristina Blanco-Vizarreta 18 Guiding Principle 18: Human Rights Impact Assessments 136 Claire Bright and Céline da Graça Pires 19 Guiding Principle 19: Acting Upon Human Rights Impact Assessments 145 Björn Fasterling 20 Guiding Principle 20: Tracking Business Human Rights Responses 155 Andreas Rühmkorf 21 Guiding Principle 21: Communication of Human Rights Impacts 162 Andreas Rühmkorf 22 Guiding Principle 22: Remediation 169 Florencia S. Wegher Osci 23 Guiding Principle 23: Legal Compliance Issues of Business Enterprises 176 Simon Baughen 24 Guiding Principle 24: Prioritization of Severe Human Rights Impacts by Businesses 184 Salvador Herencia-Carrasco 25 Guiding Principle 25: Access to Remedy—Foundational Principle 189 Dalia Palombo 26 Guiding Principle 26: Domestic Judicial Mechanisms 198 Penelope Simons 27 Guiding Principle 27: State-based Non-judicial Grievance Mechanisms 206 Markus Krajewski 28 Guiding Principle 28: Non-state-based Grievance Mechanisms 214 Jennifer A. Zerk 29 Guiding Principle 29: Non-State-Based Grievance Mechanisms; Role of Business 222 Martijn Scheltema 30 Guiding Principle 30: The Role of Collaborative Initiatives in Respecting Human Rights 230 Dorothée Baumann-Pauly and Lilach Trabelsi 31 Guiding Principle 31: Effectiveness Criteria for Non-Judicial Grievance Mechanisms 237 Anna Triponel PART II PRINCIPLES FOR RESPONSIBLE CONTRACTS 32 PRC 1: Preparation and Planning 248 Daria Davitti and Sorcha MacLeod 33 PRC 2: Managing Potential Adverse Human Rights Impact 255 Shavana Haythornthwaite 34 PRC 3: Project Operating Standards 263 Dr Shavana Haythornthwaite 35 PRC 4: Contractual Stabilization Clauses 270 Jernej Letnar Černič 36 PRC 5: Additional Goods or Services 277 Margaret G. Wachenfeld 37 PRC 6: Physical Security for the Project 285 Sorcha MacLeod and Daria Davitti 38 PRC 7: Designing Inclusive Community Engagement Strategies 292 Tehtena Mebratu-Tsegaye and Solina Kennedy 39 PRC 8: Project Monitoring and Compliance 299 Sarah Platts 40 PRC 9: Non-judicial Grievance Mechanisms 306 Stefan Zagelmeyer 41 PRC 10: Transparency and Disclosure of Contractual Terms – The last and the least of the ten principles? 314 Motoko Aizawa Index

    £160.00

  • Beyond Shareholder Value: A Framework for

    Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Beyond Shareholder Value: A Framework for

    Book SynopsisThis timely and engaging book examines how maximizing shareholder value has played a dominant role in corporate governance over recent decades, and analyzes the resulting effect on share prices in the stock markets. Alongside the rise in corporate power and deepening economic inequality, the author investigates corporate law reform as a corrective remedy.Beyond Shareholder Value offers an astute analysis of key topics such as corporate incentive structures that reward executives for delivering shareholder value and permissive rules that enable companies to issue shares at will at rising valuations. P.M. Vasudev explores the laws intended to protect stakeholders and deftly unpacks the shortcomings in employment-related laws and antitrust enforcement. Demonstrating how alternative dispute resolution can be used to promote stakeholder governance, the book explains how the overly broad business judgment rule impedes effective adjudication of complex stakeholder disputes.This insightful book offers a new perspective on stakeholder governance, and will prove indispensable reading for academics and legal researchers working in the field of corporate law and governance. Its innovative approach will also benefit practitioners and policy makers alike.Trade Review‘Professor Vasudev’s contribution is both timely and important. In identifying the normative tensions that mark the journey of the corporation until this very day, he is able to convincingly argue for a complex and long-term oriented understanding of business corporations and their place in changing political economies. Rather than being a mere investment vehicle that prioritizes and serves a limited set of interests, the corporation reemerges as a site of social transformation, innovation and sustainable planning. This excellent study is an inspiring and highly rewarding reading for anyone with a “stake” in reflecting on the blind spots of contemporary corporate governance.’Table of ContentsContents: Introduction PART I SHAREHOLDER VALUE AND ITS DISCONTENTS 1. Shareholder value – conception and execution 2. Shareholder value – delivery and outcomes 3. Impact on corporate governance and enterprise management PART II SHAREHOLDER VALUE AS LAW 4. Shareholder value becomes law 5. Shareholder primacy – the original sin? 6. The anatomy of shareholder value – shares unleashed 7. Corporate law and its making – the question of democratic legitimacy PART III STAKEHOLDER VISION – THE JOURNEY SO FAR AND THE FUTURE 8. The stakeholder journey – so far 9. Stakeholder governance – a framework for the present and the future References Index

    £125.00

  • American Business Bankruptcy: A Primer

    Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd American Business Bankruptcy: A Primer

    Book SynopsisThe second edition of the first and only concise introduction to American business insolvency law, this volume provides a succinct overview of American business bankruptcy as it is actually practiced, integrating the law as written and implemented, and now includes coverage of the Small Business Reorganization Act.American Business Bankruptcy explores specialized proceedings like brokerage liquidations, pre-packaged chapter 11 cases, and 363 sales. Professor Lubben also reviews the transnational aspects of modern American bankruptcy practice, and explains chapter 15 of the Bankruptcy Code, which allows for foreign insolvency proceedings to be ‘recognized’ in U.S. courts.U.S law students and junior attorneys, international insolvency professionals, and non-legal professionals, including bankers and accountants, will appreciate this practical synthesis, which includes citations and guidance for further research.Trade Review‘The author’s second edition of his primer on American Business Bankruptcy provides a concise and accessible description of the key chapters of the US Bankruptcy Code. This book would be quite useful to students of insolvency law and indeed anyone who wishes to develop a working knowledge of the key aspects of the American insolvency framework. It is direct and clear, while also providing enough depth and discussion that it would also be useful from a comparative perspective. It is a very practical synthesis which, in the second edition, integrates the recent Small Business Reorganisation Act.’ -- Jennifer L.L. Gant, eurofenix‘Stephen Lubben has provided the go-to overview of the American business bankruptcy system. American Business Bankruptcy is the ideal book for anyone looking to understand the overall design of business restructuring in the United States.’ -- Adam Levitin, Georgetown University Law Center, USTable of ContentsContents: Preface PART I BUSINESS BANKRUPTCY BASICS 1. Some historical context 2. The central core of business bankruptcy – section 109 PART II ELEMENTS COMMON TO ALL BUSINESS BANKRUPTCIES 3. The estate and the automatic stay 4. Creditors’ claims against the estate 5. Executory contracts and unexpired leases 6. The avoidance powers PART III LIQUIDATION UNDER CHAPTER 7. An introduction to chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code 8. The chapter 7 trustee 9. Distributing the chapter 7 estate 10. Special chapter 7 cases PART IV REORGANIZATION UNDER CHAPTER 11 11. An introduction to chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code 12. Stabilizing the debtor’s business in chapter 11 13. Committees 14. Professionals 15. The plan – formulation and voting 16. The plan – confirmation (consensual) 17. The plan – confirmation (cramdown) 18. 363 sales 19. Prepacks 20. The effects of plan confirmation 21. Small businesses in chapter 11 PART V TRANSNATIONAL BUSINESS BANKRUPTCY UNDER CHAPTER 22. An introduction to chapter 15 of the Bankruptcy Code Index

    £90.00

  • Alternative Development Finance and Parallel

    Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Alternative Development Finance and Parallel

    Book SynopsisThis insightful book examines the impact of two competing visions of Asian-Pacific economic growth paths and development governance. It discusses law, development and finance in the context of the Indo-Pacific Strategy versus the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), whilst also comparing parallel development financing systems.Jin Sheng reflects on and connects a series of issues of global significance, such as the economic Cold War, global debt, industrialisation and development in the developing world, and the changing international economic order. In so doing the author posits that the BRI’s ultimate objective is to export China’s development model, which is characterised by a focus on exports, experimentalism, and oversupply of currency. The book also critically examines China’s ambition to dominate the international economic order and set up its own favoured international rules.Alternative Development Finance and Parallel Development Strategies in the Asia-Pacific will be an important read for researchers and policy makers in the fields of law, development and finance in the Asia-Pacific region.Table of ContentsContents: 1. Infrastructure matters 2. Law, development, and finance 3. The One Belt One Road (obor) initiative: A global “great leap forward” or a “great leap outward”? 4. Asia’s two financial hubs and sovereign funds 5. Establishment and governance of Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank: Alternative development finance? 6. Established Bretton Woods IFIs vs emerging AIIB affiliates 7. Racing for development hegemony 8. Conclusion: The new Cold War has started Index

    £90.00

  • International Investment Law and General

    Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd International Investment Law and General

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisThis book questions whether investment law influences the wider field of general international law, and more specifically, whether approaches adopted by tribunals in investment arbitrations have radiated, or should radiate, into other fields of international law.To answer this question, the book engages in a detailed analysis of pronouncements by investment tribunals on state responsibility, the law of treaties, and general principles of dispute resolution, and evaluates their impact beyond the narrow field of investment law. The perspectives provided in the book highlight how rules of general international law are concretised, specified, and at times moulded in investment arbitration practice. By doing so, the book enhances our understanding of the relationship between general international law and one its most dynamic sub-disciplines.Combining conceptual and practical perspectives, and offering a detailed analysis of the pertinent case law, the book is a plea for a fuller engagement directed at both general international lawyers and international investment lawyers. It will help investment lawyers better understand the role of general international law in their field of practice. General international lawyers will benefit from paying close attention to how investment lawyers apply and interpret rules of general international law.Trade Review‘Few would deny today that general international law is pivotal in the everyday practice of investor-state dispute settlement. Matters of treaty interpretation, attribution of conduct or issues pertaining to remedies – among many others – have become the bread and butter of international investment law. This excellent volume, however, changes perspective. It assesses the actual and potential impact of international investment law practice on general international law: How does it shape, how do its investment law’s actors influence general international law? Such approach is fascinating not least because no other field of international law contributes as much to adjudicatory practice in terms of numbers of awards and decisions. The contributions in Radiating Effects intriguingly explore an understudied but rich topic, looking specifically at the law of treaties, international responsibility and dispute resolution. This book is a must-read not only for those interested in investment law and arbitration but for anybody who practices, studies or teaches international law.’ -- Andreas Kulick, University of Tübingen, GermanyTable of ContentsContents: Preface and acknowledgments x PART I OVERARCHING PERSPECTIVES 1 Radiating effects: The gentle impact of international investment law on general international law 2 Christian J. Tams, Stephan W. Schill and Rainer Hofmann 2 The development of international law by ICSID tribunals 31 Christoph Schreuer 3 Sources of international investment law: Sonderweg or lodestar in international dispute settlement? 47 Stephan W. Schill PART II INVESTMENT LAW AND THE GENERAL LAW OF TREATIES 4 Questions of treaty interpretation 80 Berta Boknik and Tarcisio Gazzini 5 The temporal scope of application of investment treaties and the effects on general international law 107 Christina Binder and Jane A. Hofbauer 6 Ways out of the marshland: International investment law and the law of state succession 150 Christian J. Tams PART III INVESTMENT LAW AND THE LAW OF INTERNATIONAL RESPONSIBILITY 7 Investment arbitration as an engine of development of the rules of attribution – with particular focus on lex specialis and de facto state organs 181 Stephan Wittich 8 The impact of investment arbitration in the development of state responsibility defences 209 Federica I. Paddeu 9 Remedies for wrongful conduct: Lessons from investment arbitration 246 Dirk Pulkowski PART IV INVESTMENT LAW AND THE GENERAL REGIME OF DISPUTE RESOLUTION 10 Investment arbitration as incubator of evidentiary principles in international and transnational law 280 Frédéric Gilles Sourgens 11 On the contribution of investment arbitration to issues of evidence and procedure before other international courts and tribunals 343 James G. Devaney 12 Review and enforcement of arbitral awards in international investment law and general public international law 368 Michail Risvas Index 393

    15 in stock

    £135.00

  • Rethinking the Regulation of Cryptoassets:

    Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Rethinking the Regulation of Cryptoassets:

    Book SynopsisThis thought-provoking book challenges the way we think about the regulation of cryptoassets based on cryptographic consensus technology. Bringing a timely new perspective, Syren Johnstone critiques the application of a financial regulation narrative to cryptoassets, questions the assumptions on which it is based, and considers its impact on industry development.Providing new insights into the dynamics of oversight regulation, Johnstone argues that the financial narrative stifles the 'New Prospect' for the formation of novel commercial relationships and institutional arrangements. The book asks whether regulations developed in the 20th century remain appropriate to apply to a technology emerging in the 21st, suggesting it is time to think about how to regulate for ecosystem development. Johnstone concludes with proposals for reform, positing a new framework that facilitates industry aspirations while remaining sustainable and compatible with regulatory objectives.Rethinking the Regulation of Cryptoassets will be an invaluable read for policy makers, regulators and technologists looking for a deeper understanding of the issues surrounding cryptoasset regulation and possible alternative approaches. It will also be of interest to scholars and students researching the intersection of law, technology, regulation and finance.Trade Review‘Prof. Johnstone’s book on the regulation of cryptoassets forces us to think twice about the way we try to regulate the digital economy. He challenges the habit of the regulators to push new disruptive ideas and instruments into old frames and concepts, and invites them to move out of their comfort zone. Rethinking the Regulation of Cryptoassets is a complete account of the challenges we face in developing a crypto-economy and proposes a coherent and sustainable regulatory framework that ensures both market efficiency and technological relevance.’ -- Eva Kaili, Chair of the STOA Committee, Rapporteur of the Blockchain Resolution of the European Parliament, Brussels‘Cryptographic consensus technology presents extraordinary market opportunities but also raises a host of vexing regulatory challenges. Rethinking the Regulation of Cryptoassets maps this complex terrain and charts a way forward, offering a novel approach to the regulatory enterprise to protect against abuses while fostering innovation. Johnstone brings considerable legal, financial, and technological sophistication to the task, and his analysis is at once rigorous and accessible. This book will become essential reading on the future of cryptoassets.’ -- Christopher Bruner, University of Georgia School of Law, US‘The crypto industry moves fast and requires regulatory frameworks that can cater to that pace. Prof. Johnstone brings forward a number of ideas that are worth reflecting on as crypto assets are definitely here to stay.’ -- Henri Arslanian, Global Crypto Leader and Partner, PwC‘Johnstone provides a refreshing way to think about the regulatory limits of applying the standard financial narrative to a technology that is globally programmable but locally valuable. His DBA (Determined-By-Architecture) framework may help align regulation with the borderless possibilities of mathematics.’ -- Pindar Wong, Chairman, VeriFi (Hong Kong) LtdTable of ContentsContents: About the author Foreword Preface Why cryptoasset regulation needs rethinking: an introduction PART I THE INITIAL JOURNEY Acquiring the tradition 2 Cypher fundamentals 3 Responses from the centre PART II THE PRIMARY ISSUES 4 Applying securities laws to cryptoassets 5 Regulatory building blocks and other concerns 6 Complexities in a developing technology PART III THE SECONDARY MARKET 7 An emerging market 8 Cryptoexchange models 9 The concept of an exchange 10 Regulatory concerns PART IV INFLUENCES AND CONSIDERATIONS 11 The ordering of progress 12 Ecosystem development 13 Incrementalism and paradigms PART V FUTURE DIRECTIONS 14 Responding to change 15 Proposals for policy development 16 The origin of cryptocommunity Suggested readings Postscript Index

    £109.00

  • Broker-Dealer Compliance: A Case-based Guide to

    Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Broker-Dealer Compliance: A Case-based Guide to

    Book SynopsisBroker-Dealer Compliance is a concise yet comprehensive guide that reviews the state of broker-dealer compliance, both from general and practical perspectives. While the book has a practical focus, it also makes use of legal scholarship and behavioral and organizational literature on compliance that have grown exponentially in recent years.James Fanto discusses the main, well-established elements and practices in a broker-dealer compliance program and illustrates them with case studies and practical examples drawn from real-life situations to demonstrate the goals of a particular program element and problems in its implementation. Moreover, each chapter highlights the pressures on compliance officers and the trends that collectively may transform compliance practice in a particular area.Professionals in broker-dealer and investment firm compliance practice will find this book a readable introduction to the field. Experienced practitioners can refresh their knowledge and even learn something new about brokerage compliance program elements and practices.Trade Review‘Jim Fanto gives readers a readable, sophisticated and practical guide for all those trying to find their way through the maze of contemporary compliance, including best practices and traps for the unwary.’ -- Donald Langevoort, Georgetown University Law Center, US‘James Fanto has written a comprehensive and exceedingly accessible book on the topic of broker-dealer compliance. Professor Fanto is extraordinarily well-situated to address this topic, having served as a reporter on the American Law Institute’s Principles of Compliance project. The book clearly articulates the applicable rules and regulations, illustrating the key points with helpful case studies. It will be an indispensable reference work for those involved or interested in the field.’ -- Claire Hill, University of Minnesota Law School, USTable of ContentsContents: Preface 1. Introduction: why broker-dealer compliance? 2. Compliance risk management 3. Compliance policies and procedures 4. Compliance training 5. Compliance advice, ethics, and culture 6. Compliance monitoring and surveillance 7. Compliance investigations 8. Evaluation of the compliance program 9. Specialized compliance in broker-dealers 10. Compliance officer’s relationship with regulators 11. Reflections on the future of broker-dealer compliance Selected and annotated bibliography Index

    £100.64

  • A Research Agenda for Financial Crime

    Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd A Research Agenda for Financial Crime

    Book SynopsisIn this timely Research Agenda, Barry Rider has assembled a cast of internationally renowned experts to identify the most pressing questions and issues around financial crime, helping to inform our understanding of how best to protect our economies and financial institutions.The book begins by considering what is meant by the term financial crime, addressing how and to whom it causes harm, the ways in which we might evaluate its incidence and impact, and the increasing relevance of measures designed to disrupt economically motivated criminals. Chapters explore the various factors that have led to the rise of financial crime in recent decades, from advances in technology to the practical issues in effective prevention and interdiction. Bringing together an array of perspectives from experts in law, criminology, and regulation and compliance, the book ultimately advances multiple agendas for future research to enhance our understanding of financial crime and better promote its prevention, containment, and management.This incisive Research Agenda will be an invaluable resource for scholars of law, criminology, management studies, and compliance and risk. Its practical insights will also benefit criminal and regulatory lawyers, as well as legislators and researchers involved in the protection of their economies and financial institutions against financial crime.Trade Review‘Professor Barry Rider, himself a first rate authority on economic crime, has corralled a team of 10 noted academics to produce a timely agenda for research into fraud. His theme of prevention, containment and management provides a convincing response to a neglected but vital sector of criminality which enjoys worryingly exponential growth.’ -- Sir David Green CB QC, Former Director of the Serious Fraud Office‘This is an impressive array of experts with practical experience of the fight against all kinds of financial crime. Their agenda for in-depth research into the surge facing legislators, prosecutors, courts and regulators is thought-provoking. Conclusion: unless Governments resource more research and take more effective measures to prevent and punish financial crime things will only get worse, everywhere and for everyone except the criminals.’ -- Sir John Mummery, former Lord Justice of Appeal and former President of the Investigatory Powers Tribunal‘The nature of financial crime has changed due to automation and globalisation. The Research Agenda needs to change too. This book provides the up-to-date guidance researchers need to use if they’re going to provide the advice society needs to battle economic crime.’ -- Michael Mainelli, Chairman, Z/Yen Group, late Sheriff of the City of London 2019-2021Table of ContentsContents: Foreword xiii Introduction xvii 1 Financial crime as an area of study and research 1 Barry Rider 2 Corporate misconduct’s relevance to society 31 Eugene Soltes 3 Financial crimes – a criminological research perspective 49 Michael Levi 4 Controlling financial crime by utilizing the criminal justice system 69 John Reading SC 5 Challenges in policing financial crime 89 Mary Alice Young and Amber Phillips 6 Financial crime: the regulator’s perspective 105 G Philip Rutledge 7 Financial regulation and fraudulent activity 125 Andrew Haynes 8 Cybercrime and cyber resilience 147 Richard Parlour 9 Research priorities for the international control of economic and financial crime 169 Richard Alexander Index 189

    £94.00

  • A Research Agenda for Economic Crime and

    Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd A Research Agenda for Economic Crime and

    Book SynopsisThis contemporary Research Agenda examines the threats to stability and sustainability presented by economically motivated crime and misconduct. Featuring contributions from distinguished experts in the field of criminal law and justice, this book proposes avenues for future research into the legal frameworks designed to prevent and manage economic crime and corruption. Barry Rider begins by considering the importance of discouraging economically relevant criminals from undermining the efficacy and stability of global economies. Chapters analyse a myriad of topics, including the economic crime-related repercussions of the Covid-19 pandemic, the development of small state financial centres, and the key measures adopted by the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) to combat corruption. The book concludes by examining comparative perspectives in fighting organised crime, featuring case studies involving human trafficking and issues of compliance. A Research Agenda for Economic Crime and Development will be an essential resource for scholars and academics studying criminal law and justice, economic crime and corruption, and law and development. It will also be beneficial to criminal and regulatory lawyers, policymakers, and researchers interested in the prevention of economic crime.Trade Review‘Professor Barry Rider OBE has been the leading academic on economic crime since the early 1980s. His important scholarship on financial fraud, and on cross cutting issues including restitution and tort liability, has shaped the academic field and set the agenda for the cooperation between different government agencies. This book introduces a fresh and important research agenda for economic crime and development, challenging traditional assumptions, and confronting the real damage that economic crime can do to the economies of the world.’ -- Mads Andenas KC, University of Oslo, Norway and University of London, UK‘A Research Agenda for Economic Crime and Development seamlessly weaves together a compendium of insightful, thought-provoking pieces written by established, and emerging, scholars and legal practitioners. Professor Barry Rider and all the contributors should be commended for producing this timely must-read for academics, policymakers and anyone concerned with the much overlooked, yet fundamental, inter-relationship between economic crime and developmental issues.’ -- Shazeeda Ali, University of the West Indies, JamaicaTable of ContentsContents: Foreword xv Preface xix 1 Introduction to A Research Agenda for Economic Crime and Development 1 Barry Rider 2 Stability, security and sustainable development 47 Ingrida Kerusauskaite 3 Economic crime in developing and transition economies 75 Dayanath Jayasuriya 4 Corruption and development 93 Patrick Rappo 5 Anti-money laundering, suspect wealth and development 117 Dominic Thomas-James 6 International interventions and sovereignty 137 Rohan Clarke 7 Governance, integrity and sustainability – joining the dots? 155 Chizu Nakajima 8 FATF measures and the combating of corruption in developing countries 175 Louis de Koker 9 Comparative perspectives in fighting organized crime 205 Antonello Miranda Index

    £100.00

  • Advanced Introduction to U.S. Federal Securities

    Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Advanced Introduction to U.S. Federal Securities

    Book SynopsisElgar Advanced Introductions are stimulating and thoughtful introductions to major fields in the social sciences, business and law, expertly written by the world’s leading scholars. Designed to be accessible yet rigorous, they offer concise and lucid surveys of the substantive and policy issues associated with discrete subject areas. Covering all aspects of federal securities law, this Advanced Introduction provides an excellent understanding of how U.S. securities regulation works, particularly as this emerging area of law becomes more prevalent for those working or involved in general corporate and commercial practices. It examines the definition of securities and how modern investment opportunities may be subject to this regulation as well as more traditional forms such as stocks or bonds. Key Features: Providing up to date information on the latest developments in securities law Presenting complex material in a clear and comprehensive format and defining key concepts Thoroughly reviewing significant Supreme Court cases, alongside the noteworthy statues and Securities and Exchange Commission Rules This informative book will be invaluable reading for practitioners and others engaged in the business and securities world looking for a detailed overview of U.S. securities law. It will also be a useful resource for lawyers, scholars, and policy advisors.Trade Review‘The scope, density and mysteries of the American securities laws cannot be overstated. Even to one who deals regularly in advising clients how to raise capital, there are robust fields, e.g., broker-dealer regulation and the securities laws own corporate law that is housed in the Investment Company Act, that are outside the lawyer’s comfort level. Professor Hazen’s book thus fills the need for everyone pondering that first step toward advising a client. He combines understandability with depth of coverage in this very comprehensive, and long overdue, pathway through the American securities laws.’ -- James D. Cox, Duke University, School of Law, US‘Professor Thomas L. Hazen is a leading and much cited scholar on the scope and application of the federal securities laws. His most recent work, Advanced Introduction to U.S. Federal Securities Law, provides an invaluable overview of those statutes. It will be particularly useful and highly recommended for those unfamiliar with their mandates and for practitioners needing a refresher course on securities law issues.’ -- Jerry W. Markham, Florida International University, Miami, USTable of ContentsContents: Preface 1. Introduction and Scope of U.S. Securities Laws 2. Regulating Securities Distributions—Securities Act of 1933 3. 1933 Act Registration Exemptions 4. 1933 Act Liabilities 5. 1934 Act 6. 1934 Act Liabilities 7. Insider Trading 8. Market Regulation 9. The Trust Indenture Act of 1939 10. The Investment Company Act of 1940 11. The Investment Advisers Act of 1940 Index

    £98.67

  • Advanced Introduction to U.S. Federal Securities

    Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Advanced Introduction to U.S. Federal Securities

    Book SynopsisElgar Advanced Introductions are stimulating and thoughtful introductions to major fields in the social sciences, business and law, expertly written by the world’s leading scholars. Designed to be accessible yet rigorous, they offer concise and lucid surveys of the substantive and policy issues associated with discrete subject areas. Covering all aspects of federal securities law, this Advanced Introduction provides an excellent understanding of how U.S. securities regulation works, particularly as this emerging area of law becomes more prevalent for those working or involved in general corporate and commercial practices. It examines the definition of securities and how modern investment opportunities may be subject to this regulation as well as more traditional forms such as stocks or bonds. Key Features: Providing up to date information on the latest developments in securities law Presenting complex material in a clear and comprehensive format and defining key concepts Thoroughly reviewing significant Supreme Court cases, alongside the noteworthy statues and Securities and Exchange Commission Rules This informative book will be invaluable reading for practitioners and others engaged in the business and securities world looking for a detailed overview of U.S. securities law. It will also be a useful resource for lawyers, scholars, and policy advisors.Trade Review‘The scope, density and mysteries of the American securities laws cannot be overstated. Even to one who deals regularly in advising clients how to raise capital, there are robust fields, e.g., broker-dealer regulation and the securities laws own corporate law that is housed in the Investment Company Act, that are outside the lawyer’s comfort level. Professor Hazen’s book thus fills the need for everyone pondering that first step toward advising a client. He combines understandability with depth of coverage in this very comprehensive, and long overdue, pathway through the American securities laws.’ -- James D. Cox, Duke University, School of Law, US‘Professor Thomas L. Hazen is a leading and much cited scholar on the scope and application of the federal securities laws. His most recent work, Advanced Introduction to U.S. Federal Securities Law, provides an invaluable overview of those statutes. It will be particularly useful and highly recommended for those unfamiliar with their mandates and for practitioners needing a refresher course on securities law issues.’ -- Jerry W. Markham, Florida International University, Miami, USTable of ContentsContents: Preface 1. Introduction and Scope of U.S. Securities Laws 2. Regulating Securities Distributions—Securities Act of 1933 3. 1933 Act Registration Exemptions 4. 1933 Act Liabilities 5. 1934 Act 6. 1934 Act Liabilities 7. Insider Trading 8. Market Regulation 9. The Trust Indenture Act of 1939 10. The Investment Company Act of 1940 11. The Investment Advisers Act of 1940 Index

    £18.95

  • Regulation on European Crowdfunding Service

    Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Regulation on European Crowdfunding Service

    Book SynopsisThis innovative Commentary boasts contributions from internationally renowned experts with extensive and diverse backgrounds, providing a comprehensive, critical, article-by-article and thematic analysis of the EU Regulation No 1503/2020 on European Crowdfunding Service Providers for Business (ECSPR). Chapters analyse Member States’ adaptation of their legal frameworks to the ECSPR, underlying similarities, divergences, additional problematic issues and residual regulatory fragmentation.Key Features: A theoretical and cross-sectoral approach to crowdfunding services and relative regulations Constant comparison of ECSPR’s provisions with other similar or interrelated EU frameworks An article-by-article and thematic analysis of the ECSPR, underlying its strengths, innovative characters and problematic aspects Analysis of the implementation of the ECSPR in different countries and adaptation of their legal frameworks, including France, Germany, Italy, Portugal, Spain, the Netherlands, Nordic countries and the Baltics The Commentary is a fundamental companion to the interpretation and application of the ECSPR which will appeal to a diverse range of readers. Academics, scholars, practitioners and professionals interested in financial regulation, EU law, technology law, business law, law of contracts, competition law, international law and comparative law will find this a beneficial resource.Table of ContentsContents: Foreword xxxv Diego Valiante Preface and acknowledgments xli PART I THE EUROPEAN CROWDFUNDING REGULATION: PRELIMINARY ASPECTS 1 Introduction to the Crowdfunding Regulation 2 Eugenia Macchiavello 2 The context: the crowdfunding market and its recent developments 15 Rotem Shneor PART II THE REGULATION ON EUROPEAN CROWDFUNDING SERVICE PROVIDERS FOR BUSINESS: AN ARTICLE-BY-ARTICLE ANALYSIS 3 The scope of the ECSPR: the difficult compromise between harmonization, client protection and the ‘level playing field’ (Arts 1–2, 46, 48–9, 51) 44 Eugenia Macchiavello 4 The provision of crowdfunding services under the ECSPR (Art 3) 68 Sebastiaan Niels Hooghiemstra 5 Legal issues in the obligations for an effective and prudent management of crowdfunding service providers (Art 4) 86 Federico Ferretti and Francesca Mattassoglio 6 Due diligence of project owners (Art 5) 105 Marije Louisse 7 Individual portfolio management of loans (Art 6) 113 Roberto Ferretti 8 Complaints handling (Art 7) 130 Roberto Ferretti 9 Intermediation risk and conflicts of interest (Art 8) 136 Diogo Pereira Duarte 10 Outsourcing under the ECSPR (Art 9) 150 Ella van Kranenburg 11 The provision of asset safekeeping services and payment services by ECSP and third parties (Art 10) 167 Sebastiaan Niels Hooghiemstra 12 Prudential requirements for crowdfunding service providers (Art 11) 184 Marije Louisse 13 Authorisation procedure, scope of authorisation and register (Arts 12–14) 197 Tanja Aschenbeck and Lina Engler 14 Supervision and reporting obligations of crowdfunding service providers (Arts 15–16) 229 Francesca Chiarelli, Leonardo Droghini and Raffaele D’Ambrosio 15 Causes and procedure of authorisation withdrawal (Art 17) 241 Tanja Aschenbeck and Lina Engler 16 The EU passporting system for crowdfunding service providers: towards a new type of passport for digital financial services? (Art 18) 252 Vittorio Tortorici 17 Investor protection and information to clients (Articles 19–20 and 26) 266 Diogo Pereira Duarte 18 Between investor protection and access to crowdfunding: the entry knowledge test and the simulation of the ability to bear loss (Art 21 and Annex II) 280 Joeri De Smet and Veerle Colaert 19 Withdrawal rights in crowdfunding transactions: the precontractual reflection period (Art 22) 300 Konstantinos Serdaris 20 On the merits of the Key Investment Information Sheet in the ECSPR (Arts 23–24 and Annex I) 310 Karsten Wenzlaff, Ana Odorović, Tobias Riethmüller and Patrick Wambold 21 Secondary markets for crowdfunding: bulletin boards (Art 25) 350 Matteo Gargantini 22 The new European rules on advertising crowdfunding campaigns: between proportionality and customer protection (Arts 27–28) 367 Tommaso Martini Varvesi and Vittorio Tortorici 23 Competent authorities: their power and their coordination (Arts 29–30 and 33) 383 Anna Maria Agresti 24 From cooperation to coercion: the relationships between competent authorities under Articles 31, 34 and 37 ECSPR (Arts 31, 34, 37) 391 Nathan de Arriba-Sellier 25 ESMA and NCAs: cooperation in supervision (Art 32) 409 Giuseppe Pala, Marco Lamandini and Raffaele D’Ambrosio 26 Balancing confidentiality and transparency: the ECSPR professional secrecy standard in light of cross-sectoral EU financial regulation and ECJ case law (Art 35) 419 Nikolai Badenhoop 27 The GDPR and the data processing of the competent authorities in performing their duties under the ECSPR (Art 36) 434 Federico Ferretti 28 Complaint handling: the role of competent authorities (Art 38) 451 Anna Maria Agresti 29 Ex post enforcement of the EU crowdfunding regime: administrative sanctions and measures (Arts 39–43) 455 Konstantinos Serdaris 30 The delegation of powers to the European Commission within the crowdfunding legal framework (Art 44) 474 Federico Riganti 31 The Commission’s interim report and prospective adaptations of the ECSPR (Art 45) 482 Eugenia Macchiavello 32 The protection regime of the Whistleblower Directive (Arts 47 and 50) 497 Ghazale Mandegarian-Fricke PART III A FOCUS ON SPECIAL ISSUES WITHOUT ANSWER IN THE ECSPR 33 The silence of the ECSPR on tax law – reduction of hurdles in the distant future? 514 Ulrike Bär 34 Crowdfunding in the EU: private international law issues by design 529 Ivana Kunda 35 Crowdfunding, alternative investment funds and the relationship between the ECSPR and the AIFMD 548 Sebastiaan Niels Hooghiemstra 36 Crowdfunding and DLTs: the imperative need for more clarity 565 Filippo Annunziata and Thomaz de Arruda 37 Crowdfunding platforms, competition law and platform sector regulation 578 Carmen Estevan de Quesada 38 Crowdfunding and consumer credit protection in the EU 591 Antonella Sciarrone Alibrandi and Edoardo Grossule 39 Invoice trading and regulation: the case of Italy 607 Umberto Piattelli and Sofia Caruso 40 Beyond the ECSPR and financial return: the Regulation of donation and reward-based crowdfunding in the EU 619 Eugenia Macchiavello and Chiara Valenti 41 Crowdlending and crowdinvesting in Europe: a comparative analysis between the UK and EU regulatory frameworks 646 Francesco De Pascalis PART IV THE IMPACT OF THE ECSPR ON THE CROWDFUNDING LEGAL FRAMEWORK IN SELECTED COUNTRIES 42 Crowdfunding in France after the adoption of the ECSPR 664 Jean-Marc Moulin 43 The crowdfunding regulation in Germany – on the path to self-isolation? 673 Karsten Wenzlaff and Ana Odorović 44 The impact of the ECSPR on the crowdfunding legal framework in Italy 694 Umberto Piattelli and Sofia Caruso 45 Where the ECSPR pinches the Dutch shoe: some brain teasers from a Dutch law perspective 711 Anne Hakvoort 46 The Portuguese crowdfunding regime and the impact of the ECSPR 729 Diogo Pereira Duarte and Joana da Costa Lopes 47 A comparative analysis of Spanish crowdfunding regulation and the ECSPR 751 Matilde Cuena Casas and Segismundo Álvarez Royo-Villanova 48 The regulation of crowdfunding in the Nordic countries 765 Elif Härkönen, Thomas Neumann and Cecilie Højvang Christensen 49 ECSPR implementation in the Baltics 784 Nikita Divissenko 50 ECSPR versus the United States crowdfunding regime 796 Elif Härkönen 51 Conclusions about the ECSPR and its harmonization force: a brief summary of the objectives achieved and the remaining ‘grey’ areas from a comparative law perspective 808 Eugenia Macchiavello Annex: The evolution of the ECSPR text – overview of the main revisions in trilateral negotiations 822 Eugenia Macchiavello Index 825

    £307.00

  • A Commentary on EMIR and Refit

    Edward Elgar Publishing A Commentary on EMIR and Refit

    Book SynopsisThis Commentary presents a critical examination of the 2012 European Market Infrastructure Regulation (EMIR) and its 2019 Refit. Mark Hsiao evaluates the effectiveness of this EU framework in regulating over-the-counter (OTC) derivatives, exploring how the legislation fits into a broader global context while underscoring its pluralist elements.

    £145.00

  • Research Handbook on Asian Financial Law

    Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Research Handbook on Asian Financial Law

    2 in stock

    Book SynopsisThis comprehensive Research Handbook provides an in-depth analysis of the different financial law approaches, legal systems and trends throughout Asia. Considering how reforms following the crises have been critical for the development and growth of the region, this insightful book explores a broad range of post-crisis financial regulatory issues. It also examines how inconsistent and divergent approaches to financial market regulation are curtailing the region's potential. By focusing on the legal frameworks and regulatory models at a national level, this innovative Research Handbook addresses opportunities and challenges for financial markets and convergence in the region. Key topics include the different legal and regulatory approaches to common issues, such as banking regulation and resolution, FinTech, insolvency frameworks and ASEAN financial market integration. Specific regulatory approaches are discussed in relation to areas such as Renminbi internationalization, Islamic banking and finance, shadow banking, crowdfunding, venture capital, derivatives, bond and securities markets. The book concludes with an analysis of the impact of FinTech on regulatory convergence in Asia. The Research Handbook on Asian Financial Law will be of great value to law students, academics and policymakers working across a diverse range of fields including financial regulation, Asian studies, banking resolution and insolvency. Contributors include: D. Arner, J. Barberis, L. Bromberg, S. Butt, A. Chan, C. Chen, V. Chen, H. Dervan, D. Donald, D. Elms, S. Gao, E. Gibson, A. Godwin, S.i Han, L.C. Hang, C. Hofmann, I.R. Ibrahim, S. Jensen, S. Kourabas, T. Lindsey, T. Morishita, D. Neo, M.H. Nguyen, I. Ramsay, W. Shen, T. Srinopnikom, S. Steele, N.N. Thani, C.-h. Tsai, W.Y. Wan, C. Watters, C. XiTrade Review'This is an excellent Research Handbook on Asian financial law and regulation. It brings together 32 of the leading experts in the area examining the subject across 27 substantial and informed chapters. The coverage is extensive. The treatment is sharp and professional. The analysis is deep and balanced. This is a timely and necessary piece of work, especially following the recent crises and instability in Asian and global financial markets and the future potential of the region. This sets a new standard of scholarship in the area and will immediately become the new reference text on this fascinating subject.' --George Walker, Queen Mary University of London, UK'This volume brings together leading experts in Asia-Pacific financial law and regulation, offering distinguishing perspectives from literature focused on the US/EU/UK. Asian financial law and regulation deserves its own platform and this volume is timely and highly valuable to researchers and practitioners alike.' --Iris H-Y Chiu, University College London, UK'This Research Handbook brings together the region's pre-eminent financial law scholars to analyse the major issues confronting East Asia. It is filled with illuminating and incisive insights across a broad and comprehensive canvas. I commend it to all who are interested in the development of the financial systems in our part of the world. No one could dip into this work without being deeply educated.' --Ross Buckley, University of New South Wales, AustraliaTable of ContentsContents: PART I INTRODUCTION AND CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK 1 Introduction to Research Handbook on Asian Financial Law 2 Douglas W. Arner, Wai Yee Wan, Andrew Godwin, Wei Shen, and Evan Gibson 2 The historical development of financial regulatory principles: influences on Asia-Pacific systemic supervision 10 Evan Gibson and Douglas W. Arner 3 Trends and theory in financial regulation and regulatory design after the global financial crisis 30 Steve Kourabas PART II FINANCIAL REGULATION IN ASIA 4 Financial regulatory models in the Asia-Pacific – a case study in diversity 50 Andrew Godwin 5 Bank resolution 64 Christian Hofmann 6 Networked securities markets: from cross-listing to direct connection 86 David C. Donald 7 Regulation of derivatives in Asia: when technology meets financial engineering 101 Christopher Chen 8 Internationalization of renminbi: offshore renminbi businesses, offshore renminbi centres and renminbi’s reserve currency status 122 Wei Shen PART III FINANCIAL INTEGRATION IN ASIA 9 Understanding ASEAN integration and trade 145 Deborah Elms and Minh Hue Nguyen 10 Cross-border regulation of securities markets in ASEAN 173 Wai Yee Wan 11 ASEAN bond markets: developments and challenges 192 Tir Srinopnikom 12 Consumer financial dispute resolution in a time of increased regulatory scrutiny 209 Vivien Chen, Andrew Godwin and Ian Ramsay 13 Depositor preference and deposit insurance schemes – challenges for regulatory convergence and regulatory coordination in Asia 233 Angus Chan, Andrew Godwin and Ian Ramsay 14 Cross-border insolvency in East Asia: cooperation and convergence 257 Casey G. Watters PART IV COUNTRY STUDIES 15 Anti-‘grey rhino’: prudential regulation and bank resolution in China 274 Simin Gao 16 China’s puzzling banking and shadow banking sectors after the global financial crisis 293 Wei Shen 17 Macau banking law and financial institutions 315 Leong Cheng Hang 18 Indonesian financial laws: banking, insolvency and taxation 336 Tim Lindsey and Simon Butt 19 The development of Islamic banking and finance: the Malaysian experience 368 Nik Norzrul Thani and Ili Rahilah Ibrahim 20 Financial regulation in New Zealand: optimizing twin peaks 387 Helen Dervan and Simon Jensen 21 Financial consumer protection in Singapore 408 Dora Neo PART V FINTECH AND INNOVATIVE FINANCE 22 FinTech and its regulation in Hong Kong 431 Douglas W. Arner, Evan Gibson, and Janos Barberis 23 Recent developments of Japanese laws and regulations on FinTech 454 Tetsuo Morishita 24 Lessons from Mt Gox: practical considerations for a virtual currency insolvency 479 Stacey Steele and Tetsuo Morishita 25 Financial regulation as interagency competition? The saga of venture capital rule-making in China 499 Sirui Han and Chao Xi 26 Is a bird in the hand worth two in the bush? Reflections on equity crowdfunding regulation in Taiwan 525 Chang-hsien Tsai 27 Sandboxes and bridges – the impact of Fintech on regulatory convergence and coordination in Asia 547 Lev Bromberg, Andrew Godwin and Ian Ramsay Index 569

    2 in stock

    £46.50

  • International Investment Protection and

    Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd International Investment Protection and

    Book SynopsisThis book develops a conceptual framework that captures not only the tensions between constitutional values that are common to liberal democracies – human rights, democracy, and the rule of law – and the investment treaty regime, but also the potential for co-existence and complementarity.Contributions from leading experts in the field address how different systems of constitutional law interact with the investment treaty regime. Chapters provide a detailed overview of the various forms of interaction, and critically engage with the competing claims for supremacy that constitutional law and international investment law formulate. The book also addresses the reactions within the investment treaty regime to the demands formulated by constitutional law, in particular the use of constitutional analogies to understand international investment law and investor-state dispute settlement.Investigating the leading questions and issues surrounding this growing topic, this book will be an ideal read for students and scholars interested in financial, economic, and international law. Practitioners of constitutional law will also benefit from this innovative book.Trade Review‘This book offers a unique comparative contribution to the incredibly important but insufficiently investigated intersections between investment law and constitutional law. As legal systems in Europe and elsewhere grapple with these common problems at both doctrinal and systemic levels, this volume is essential reading for judges, arbitrators, lawyers and policymakers.’ -- Peter B. Rutledge, University of Georgia School of Law, US‘The interface between investment law and constitutional law is an issue of increasing salience to treaty negotiators, lawyers, apex court judges, and scholars. In this impressive collection, representing a diverse range of provocative perspectives, the authors help to further a research agenda too long overlooked. Of interest to the contributors are not only investment law’s impact on national and regional constitutional systems but also the prospects of investment law as nascent global constitutional law. If investment law scholarship has been too preoccupied with discrete doctrinal developments, this book should spark new thinking about the regime’s impact on the constitutional world-at-large.’ -- David Schneiderman, University of Toronto, Canada‘Thanks to Stephan Schill, Christian Tams and the colleagues they have assembled, the reader is given a wide-ranging insight to the various interactions between investment law and constitutional law. The book shows us that we are at a time of multiple encounters between these two bodies of law. The points of synergy and tension in these encounters are explored, such as the potential for shared values across these legal disciplines, the constraints that constitutional law imposes on investment law and arbitration, as well as the constitutionalization trends in investment law, among others. This is a must read book for those who wish to grasp the fundamental evolution of international economic law, and more especially investment law.’ -- Laurence Boisson de Chazournes, University of Geneva, SwitzerlandTable of ContentsContents: PART I INTRODUCTION 1 International investment protection and constitutional law: Between conflict and complementarity 2 Stephan W. Schill and Christian J. Tams PART II FRAMING THE DEBATE: HUMAN RIGHTS – DEMOCRACY – RULE OF LAW 2 Re-embedding foreign investment through human rights obligations for business entities: A nightmare or a noble dream? 39 Markus Krajewski 3 International investment law, democratic legitimacy, and the protection of human rights: Transforming constitutional property protection 56 Rhea Tamara Hoffmann 4 ‘Which it seeks to advance in the wider world’ – The EU’s legal obligation to promote the rule of law in international investment law 94 Till Patrik Holterhus PART III CONSTITUTIONAL LAW LIMITS IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE 5 Investor-state dispute settlement and French constitutional law: The Conseil constitutionnel’s decision of 31 July 2017 on CETA 119 Sabrina Robert-Cuendet 6 Constitutional courts and international investment law in Latin America: Between escalation and conditional coexistence 149 José Gustavo Prieto Muñoz 7 The constitutional fundamentals of EU investment policy 180 Angelos Dimopoulos 8 Constraints on intra-EU BITs in the Union legal order 221 Hannes Lenk PART IV CONSTITUTIONAL ANALOGIES IN INTERNATIONAL INVESTMENT LAW 9 Investment protection standards as global constitutional law 255 Joshua Paine 10 Inter-civilizational approaches to investor-state dispute settlement: Global constitutional adjudication or international adjudication? 306 Valentina Vadi Index 353

    £130.00

  • Blockchain and Public Law: Global Challenges in

    Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Blockchain and Public Law: Global Challenges in

    Book SynopsisThis important and topical book provides a comprehensive overview of the challenges raised by blockchain from the perspective of public law. It considers the ways in which traditional categories of public law such as sovereignty, citizenship and territory are shaped, as well as the impact of blockchain technology on fundamental rights and democratic values.Articulated in two sections, the first analyses the opportunities and the challenges that blockchain and distributed ledger technologies raise in the field of public and constitutional law, while the second highlights challenges derived from the intersection between blockchain and other legal fields such as contract law, financial law and antitrust law. A wide variety of expert contributions offer further examinations of the constitutional challenges of blockchain technologies that provide regulatory options for governments and lawmakers.Blockchain and Public Law will be a critical point of reference for scholars and students of legal theory, public policy and governmental law. It will also be beneficial to legal practitioners and lawmakers to further develop their knowledge of the field of blockchain at national and international levels.Trade Review‘The broader variety of perspectives in the book make an important contribution to current scholarly debates. Hopefully this research will also be noticed by policymakers presented with opportunities (or pressures) to adopt blockchain technologies.’ -- Albert Sanchez-Graells, How to Crack a Nut: A blog on EU economic law‘This book is a comprehensive yet extensive study on how blockchain changes our relationship with existing public institutions.‘ -- Thibault Schrepel, Utrecht University, the Netherlands‘This book cuts through the blockchain hype by compiling the research of prominent scholars that critically engage with the technology and its legal implications. It is a rich collection of lucid evaluations of blockchain and the law and an invaluable resource for anyone interested in this particular technology but also the intersection between law and technological innovation more generally.‘ -- Michèle Finck, Max Planck Institute for Innovation and Competition, GermanyTable of ContentsContents: 1 Introduction to Blockchain and Public Law 1 Oreste Pollicino and Giovanni De Gregorio PART I BLOCKCHAIN AND PUBLIC LAW 2 Blockchain utopia and its governance shortfalls 13 Uta Kohl 3 Blockchain and sovereignty 40 Riccardo de Caria 4 Blockchain and citizenship: uneasy bedfellows 59 Oskar J. Gstrein and Dimitry V. Kochenov 5 Blockchain and democracy: Challenges and opportunities of blockchain and smart contracts for democracy in the distributed, algorithmic state 76 Jurgen Goossens 6 Blockchain and authoritarianism: The evolution of decentralized autonomous organizations 89 Tom W. Bell 7 Blockchain and public administration 104 Yoan Hermstrüwer 8 Blockchain and freedom of expression 122 Giovanni De Gregorio 9 Blockchain, privacy, and data protection 140 Paul De Hert and Ashwinee Kumar 10 Blockchain for healthcare applications and use cases 156 Immaculate Motsi-Omoijiade and Alexander Kharlamov PART II BLOCKCHAIN AND PUBLIC LAW AT THE INTERSECTION 11 Blockchain and contract law: Smart contracts 191 Pietro Sirena and Francesco P. Patti 12 Blockchain and financial law: FinTech and crypto-assets 208 Filippo Annunziata 13 Blockchain and antitrust law: A roadmap 224 Maria Teresa Maggiolino and Laura Zoboli Index

    £99.00

  • Start-up Law

    Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Start-up Law

    Book SynopsisThis comprehensive Practical Guide provides direction on the wide array of legal questions and challenges that start-ups face. Start-up Law features analysis from five jurisdictions that represent a variety of legal traditions across different continents. Expert contributors address key legal issues for technology-based start-ups and entrepreneurs, as well as providing insights into the law and practice of the countries examined. Key features include: a focus on the complete life cycle of a start-up, from innovative idea through growth of the business to success or failure specific, in-depth analysis of law relating to start-up businesses in Denmark, Canada, Israel, Switzerland and the United States guidance aimed at helping start-ups and entrepreneurs navigate the diverse legal and regulatory hurdles they may encounter, including practical insights from expert contributors with first hand industry experience. Start-up Law will prove crucial reading for lawyers advising technology start-ups, as well as entrepreneurs themselves in this sector. It will also be useful for scholars and students in business and commercial law, as well as policy-makers interested in providing a supportive regulatory environment for innovation and start-ups.Trade Review‘Start-up Law provides a broad overview of the key legal questions that young companies are required to master, doing so in comprehensive language, understandable by non-practitioners. It particularly addresses the need for start-up companies to look outside their own borders to benefit from the various opportunities of global jurisdictions. For anyone who is either starting a company or looking to expand to one of the covered jurisdictions, this resource will help you save a lot of valuable time and legal fees.' -- Matthieu Guiessaz, Blockchain Valley Ventures, SwitzerlandTable of ContentsContents: Part I – Introduction and Importance of Start-ups 1. Introduction Alexandra Andhov 2. Importance of Start-ups for our Legal Systems Alexandra Andhov Part II - Jurisdictions 3. Canada Oleg Stratiev 4. Denmark Alexandra Andhov, Jakob Wested and Rasmus Kristian Feldthusen 5. Israel Ehud Kamar, Ayal Shenhav and Shay Yanovsky 6. Switzerland Michèle Ineczka Kappeler and Luigi Bruno 7. The United States Drew Amerson and Alice Armitage Index

    £121.41

  • Start-up Law

    Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Start-up Law

    Book SynopsisThis comprehensive Practical Guide provides direction on the wide array of legal questions and challenges that start-ups face. Start-up Law features analysis from five jurisdictions that represent a variety of legal traditions across different continents. Expert contributors address key legal issues for technology-based start-ups and entrepreneurs, as well as providing insights into the law and practice of the countries examined. Key features include: a focus on the complete life cycle of a start-up, from innovative idea through growth of the business to success or failure specific, in-depth analysis of law relating to start-up businesses in Denmark, Canada, Israel, Switzerland and the United States guidance aimed at helping start-ups and entrepreneurs navigate the diverse legal and regulatory hurdles they may encounter, including practical insights from expert contributors with first hand industry experience. Start-up Law will prove crucial reading for lawyers advising technology start-ups, as well as entrepreneurs themselves in this sector. It will also be useful for scholars and students in business and commercial law, as well as policy-makers interested in providing a supportive regulatory environment for innovation and start-ups.Trade Review‘Start-up Law provides a broad overview of the key legal questions that young companies are required to master, doing so in comprehensive language, understandable by non-practitioners. It particularly addresses the need for start-up companies to look outside their own borders to benefit from the various opportunities of global jurisdictions. For anyone who is either starting a company or looking to expand to one of the covered jurisdictions, this resource will help you save a lot of valuable time and legal fees.' -- Matthieu Guiessaz, Blockchain Valley Ventures, SwitzerlandTable of ContentsContents: Part I – Introduction and Importance of Start-ups 1. Introduction Alexandra Andhov 2. Importance of Start-ups for our Legal Systems Alexandra Andhov Part II - Jurisdictions 3. Canada Oleg Stratiev 4. Denmark Alexandra Andhov, Jakob Wested and Rasmus Kristian Feldthusen 5. Israel Ehud Kamar, Ayal Shenhav and Shay Yanovsky 6. Switzerland Michèle Ineczka Kappeler and Luigi Bruno 7. The United States Drew Amerson and Alice Armitage Index

    £68.35

  • Law and Corporate Finance

    Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Law and Corporate Finance

    Book SynopsisIn this thorough and enlightening book, the authors examine the role of law in developing the large financial markets necessary for national economic success. They discuss the basic foundational law of contracts, property and tort, corporate law, and securities law, providing both a broad theoretical and empirical case for its value in financial markets. The book begins with an historical analysis of the law's development, reviewing the legal governance of corporate finance with an emphasis on the development of US securities law in the twentieth century. Also provided is an extensive empirical analysis of the law's effect. A unique benefit of the book is its integration of all the relevant aspects, rather than examining them in isolation. Chapters cover the role of law in corporate finance, behavioral and empirical analyses, as well as current controversies in law and corporate finance. Ultimately, the book is a defense of the economic value of the law in the United States and throughout the world.Students and scholars of business and law will find much of interest in the authors' comprehensive study of the rule of law in today's financial markets.Trade Review'Frank Cross and Robert Prentice have written a quite useful and very clear analysis and review of the interplay between law and corporate finance.' -- Mark Roe, Harvard University Law School, US'In this impressive and ambitious book, the authors explore the role of the law in advancing the economic wellbeing of a society. Three tiers of legal regulation of business enterprises and of equity markets are examined: basic foundational law of contracts, property and tort; corporate law; and securities law. The classical economic case for government intervention on the grounds that it can enhance trust, reduce transaction costs and contribute to valuable network externalities is clearly and cogently outlined. There is also a thoughtful account of behavioural analysis of law and corporate finance. New empirical evidence is presented alongside a useful review of studies conducted by other scholars. Complementing the economic, behavioural and empirical analyses, the book also provides a concise history of the development of the law governing corporate finance. Having examined corporate finance law from these different standpoints, in the final chapter the authors draw upon their deep understanding of the subject to provide a new perspective on current controversies. A great virtue of this book is that it covers a great deal of material in a concise, lucid and stimulating manner. The fresh and rigorous analysis also stands out. There is much here that will be of value to students and scholars.' -- Eilis Ferran, University of Cambridge, UKTable of ContentsContents: 1. The Role of Law in Corporate Finance 2. The Economics of the Law and Corporate Finance 3. Behavioral Analysis of Law and Corporate Finance 4. History of Law and Corporate Finance 5. Empirical Analysis of the Law and Corporate Finance 6. Current Controversies in Law and Corporate Finance Index

    £95.00

  • The Dynamics of Global Economic Governance: The

    Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd The Dynamics of Global Economic Governance: The

    2 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe financial crisis that engulfed global markets in 2008 created an acute need for improved international economic cooperation. Despite the G20’s prominent coordination role, the regulatory response to the crisis has varied considerably across governance arenas. This book focuses on international taxation and examines how the financial crisis prompted renewed attempts to enhance international tax transparency and confront tax havens. It highlights the complexity of international regime change and the significance of national and financial interests, international organizations, domestic politics and the emerging G20 leaders forum in this process.This timely book highlights the challenges in post-financial crisis global economic governance, information that will strongly appeal to scholars and graduate students in the fields of political science, international political economy, global governance, international taxation and law. Stakeholders in the international tax regime including diplomats and tax administrators, international organizations, NGO and business representatives will also find plenty of enriching information in this study.Trade Review‘This book is an exceptionally interesting and well-researched analysis of one of the most important reforms in global governance that have been put into place in the wake of the global financial crisis that began in 2007. Eccleston insightfully draws on and contributes to theories of global governance, explaining the surprisingly innovative and successful aspects of the global arrangements for combating tax evasion while also highlighting their deficiencies.’ -- Tony Porter, McMaster University, Canada‘In the atmosphere of fiscal emergency after the financial crisis, international tax policy has become a critical concern. There is no better guide to inter-linked political and economic challenges that result than Richard Eccleston’s new book, The Dynamics of Global Economic Governance. Eccleston provides a detailed and authoritative guide to global tax governance after the financial crisis, and makes a highly persuasive case that the current international tax regime is fundamentally flawed in its efforts to combat tax evasion.’ -- Jason Sharman, Griffith University, AustraliaTable of ContentsContents: Introduction: The Financial Crisis and the Politics of International Tax Cooperation 1. Governing International Taxation: Problems and Challenges 2. The Dynamics of Global Governance 3. Politics Without Conviction: The OECD’s Failed Harmful Tax Competition Initiative 4. The Financial Crisis and the Politics of International Tax Cooperation 5. The Domestic Politics of International Tax Cooperation in the United States and Switzerland 6. Beyond the Financial Crisis: Regime Implementation and Effectiveness Conclusion: Regime Dynamics and the Sustainability of International Tax Cooperation Index

    2 in stock

    £92.00

  • Secured Credit and the Harmonisation of Law: The

    Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Secured Credit and the Harmonisation of Law: The

    5 in stock

    Book SynopsisThis is a discerning analysis of international harmonization efforts for secured credit law and examines the role of globalization and finance capital in shaping such efforts.Gerard McCormack reveals how an 'efficient' law is often seen to increase the availability, and lower the cost, of credit, thereby contributing to international development. He considers whether the most comprehensive international standard the United Nations Commission on International Trade Law (UNCITRAL) Legislative Guide (2008) is actually suitable for adoption at the national level. In particular, he examines the hypothesis that American law and lawyers have shaped the content of the guide to the extent that it is not suitable for translation into other laws.This book will be of great interest to practitioners, policy makers and academics, as well as students, particularly postgraduate students, of law and business throughout the world.Contents: Preface 1. Introduction 2. The Case for Harmonising and Modernising the Law of International Trade 3. Harmonising and Modernising Secured Transactions Law 4. National Models and Replication Across International Frontiers Article 9 of the American Uniform Commercial Law and the English Common Law 5. International Harmonisation Efforts Before the UNCITRAL Legislative Guide 6. The UNCITRAL Secured Transactions Guide 7. The Insolvency Legislative Guide 8. Conclusion IndexTrade Review’McCormack's book is a thought provoking analysis of the aims, methodology and philosophy of international harmonisation efforts in the area of secured transactions. . . recommended to all those working in and on the law of secured credit.’ -- Noel McGrath, Banking and Finance Law Review’[T]he author should be commended for canvassing and discussing an enormous volume of literature on secured transactions. Aside from the speculative theories, it provides a useful guidebook to practitioners and academics, as well as international institutions engaged in secured transactions reform.’ -- Marek Dubovec, International Trade Law and Regulation‘Secured Credit and the Harmonisation of Law is a super read, thorough, multi-faceted and supremely intelligent. It is written in Professor McCormack's usual fluent and accessible style and even the most hard-bitten professional will find the work, theoretical aspects and all, highly engaging.’ -- Sandra Frisby, INSOL WorldTable of ContentsContents: Preface 1. Introduction 2. The Case for Harmonising and Modernising the Law of International Trade 3. Harmonising and Modernising Secured Transactions Law 4. National Models and Replication Across International Frontiers – Article 9 of the American Uniform Commercial Law and the English Common Law 5. International Harmonisation Efforts Before the UNCITRAL Legislative Guide 6. The UNCITRAL Secured Transactions Guide 7. The Insolvency Legislative Guide 8. Conclusion Index

    5 in stock

    £93.00

  • Research Handbook on Asian Financial Law

    Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Research Handbook on Asian Financial Law

    Book SynopsisThis comprehensive Research Handbook provides an in-depth analysis of the different financial law approaches, legal systems and trends throughout Asia. Considering how reforms following the crises have been critical for the development and growth of the region, this insightful book explores a broad range of post-crisis financial regulatory issues. It also examines how inconsistent and divergent approaches to financial market regulation are curtailing the region's potential. By focusing on the legal frameworks and regulatory models at a national level, this innovative Research Handbook addresses opportunities and challenges for financial markets and convergence in the region. Key topics include the different legal and regulatory approaches to common issues, such as banking regulation and resolution, FinTech, insolvency frameworks and ASEAN financial market integration. Specific regulatory approaches are discussed in relation to areas such as Renminbi internationalization, Islamic banking and finance, shadow banking, crowdfunding, venture capital, derivatives, bond and securities markets. The book concludes with an analysis of the impact of FinTech on regulatory convergence in Asia. The Research Handbook on Asian Financial Law will be of great value to law students, academics and policymakers working across a diverse range of fields including financial regulation, Asian studies, banking resolution and insolvency. Contributors include: D. Arner, J. Barberis, L. Bromberg, S. Butt, A. Chan, C. Chen, V. Chen, H. Dervan, D. Donald, D. Elms, S. Gao, E. Gibson, A. Godwin, S.i Han, L.C. Hang, C. Hofmann, I.R. Ibrahim, S. Jensen, S. Kourabas, T. Lindsey, T. Morishita, D. Neo, M.H. Nguyen, I. Ramsay, W. Shen, T. Srinopnikom, S. Steele, N.N. Thani, C.-h. Tsai, W.Y. Wan, C. Watters, C. XiTrade Review'This is an excellent Research Handbook on Asian financial law and regulation. It brings together 32 of the leading experts in the area examining the subject across 27 substantial and informed chapters. The coverage is extensive. The treatment is sharp and professional. The analysis is deep and balanced. This is a timely and necessary piece of work, especially following the recent crises and instability in Asian and global financial markets and the future potential of the region. This sets a new standard of scholarship in the area and will immediately become the new reference text on this fascinating subject.' --George Walker, Queen Mary University of London, UK'This volume brings together leading experts in Asia-Pacific financial law and regulation, offering distinguishing perspectives from literature focused on the US/EU/UK. Asian financial law and regulation deserves its own platform and this volume is timely and highly valuable to researchers and practitioners alike.' --Iris H-Y Chiu, University College London, UK'This Research Handbook brings together the region's pre-eminent financial law scholars to analyse the major issues confronting East Asia. It is filled with illuminating and incisive insights across a broad and comprehensive canvas. I commend it to all who are interested in the development of the financial systems in our part of the world. No one could dip into this work without being deeply educated.' --Ross Buckley, University of New South Wales, AustraliaTable of ContentsContents: PART I INTRODUCTION AND CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK 1 Introduction to Research Handbook on Asian Financial Law 2 Douglas W. Arner, Wai Yee Wan, Andrew Godwin, Wei Shen, and Evan Gibson 2 The historical development of financial regulatory principles: influences on Asia-Pacific systemic supervision 10 Evan Gibson and Douglas W. Arner 3 Trends and theory in financial regulation and regulatory design after the global financial crisis 30 Steve Kourabas PART II FINANCIAL REGULATION IN ASIA 4 Financial regulatory models in the Asia-Pacific – a case study in diversity 50 Andrew Godwin 5 Bank resolution 64 Christian Hofmann 6 Networked securities markets: from cross-listing to direct connection 86 David C. Donald 7 Regulation of derivatives in Asia: when technology meets financial engineering 101 Christopher Chen 8 Internationalization of renminbi: offshore renminbi businesses, offshore renminbi centres and renminbi’s reserve currency status 122 Wei Shen PART III FINANCIAL INTEGRATION IN ASIA 9 Understanding ASEAN integration and trade 145 Deborah Elms and Minh Hue Nguyen 10 Cross-border regulation of securities markets in ASEAN 173 Wai Yee Wan 11 ASEAN bond markets: developments and challenges 192 Tir Srinopnikom 12 Consumer financial dispute resolution in a time of increased regulatory scrutiny 209 Vivien Chen, Andrew Godwin and Ian Ramsay 13 Depositor preference and deposit insurance schemes – challenges for regulatory convergence and regulatory coordination in Asia 233 Angus Chan, Andrew Godwin and Ian Ramsay 14 Cross-border insolvency in East Asia: cooperation and convergence 257 Casey G. Watters PART IV COUNTRY STUDIES 15 Anti-‘grey rhino’: prudential regulation and bank resolution in China 274 Simin Gao 16 China’s puzzling banking and shadow banking sectors after the global financial crisis 293 Wei Shen 17 Macau banking law and financial institutions 315 Leong Cheng Hang 18 Indonesian financial laws: banking, insolvency and taxation 336 Tim Lindsey and Simon Butt 19 The development of Islamic banking and finance: the Malaysian experience 368 Nik Norzrul Thani and Ili Rahilah Ibrahim 20 Financial regulation in New Zealand: optimizing twin peaks 387 Helen Dervan and Simon Jensen 21 Financial consumer protection in Singapore 408 Dora Neo PART V FINTECH AND INNOVATIVE FINANCE 22 FinTech and its regulation in Hong Kong 431 Douglas W. Arner, Evan Gibson, and Janos Barberis 23 Recent developments of Japanese laws and regulations on FinTech 454 Tetsuo Morishita 24 Lessons from Mt Gox: practical considerations for a virtual currency insolvency 479 Stacey Steele and Tetsuo Morishita 25 Financial regulation as interagency competition? The saga of venture capital rule-making in China 499 Sirui Han and Chao Xi 26 Is a bird in the hand worth two in the bush? Reflections on equity crowdfunding regulation in Taiwan 525 Chang-hsien Tsai 27 Sandboxes and bridges – the impact of Fintech on regulatory convergence and coordination in Asia 547 Lev Bromberg, Andrew Godwin and Ian Ramsay Index 569

    £231.00

  • Virtual Economies and Financial Crime: Money

    Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Virtual Economies and Financial Crime: Money

    2 in stock

    Book SynopsisVirtual economies and financial crime are ever-growing, increasingly significant facets to banking, finance and anti-money laundering regulations on an international scale. In this pathbreaking and timely book, these two important issues are explored together for the first time in the same place. Clare Chambers-Jones examines the jurisprudential elements of cyber law in the context of virtual economic crime and explains how virtual economic crime can take place in virtual worlds. She looks at the multi-layered and interconnected issues association with the increasing trend of global and virtual banking via the 'Second Life' MMOG (Massively Multiplayer Online Game). Through this fascinating case study, the author illustrates how virtual worlds have created a second virtual economy which transgresses into the real, creating economic, political and social issues. Loopholes used by criminals to launder money through virtual worlds (given the lack of jurisdictional consensus on detection and prosecution) are also highlighted. The importance of providing legal clarity over jurisdictional matters in cyberspace is an increasing concern for policy makers and regulators, and this book provides a wealth of information on new aspects of cyber law and virtual economics. As such, it will prove essential reading for academics, students, researchers and policy makers across the fields of law generally, and more specifically, financial law and regulation, finance, money and banking, and economic crime.Table of ContentsContents: 1. Introduction 2. History of Second Life 3. Evolution of Virtual Economies 4. Money and Culture: Its History and Evolution. A Virtual Reality 5. A Real Crime in a Virtual World 6. Law and the Virtual World 7. Recommendations and Conclusion Bibliography Index

    2 in stock

    £95.00

  • Fiscal Reforms in the Least Developed Countries

    Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Fiscal Reforms in the Least Developed Countries

    Book SynopsisFiscal reforms have been an integral and essential component of the structural adjustment programmes implemented in the least developed countries (LDCs) since the 1980s. The need for fiscal reform in the LDCs was motivated by the accumulation of unsustainable fiscal deficits, constraints on the availability of external finance, the adverse impact of distortionary tax systems on economic efficiency and deficiencies in public administration. Fiscal reform in the LDCs encompassed deficit reduction, the restructuring of the tax system, and the reform of public administration and public expenditures.The empirical research in this volume provides an analysis of the experience of the fiscal reforms carried out since the early 1980s in four different LDCs - Bangladesh, The Gambia, Malawi and the United Republic of Tanzania. The case studies examine the nature and budgetary impact of the fiscal reforms in these countries, assess the extent to which reforms have achieved their objectives and discuss the major obstacles to the success of fiscal reform. The empirical studies are supplemented by a chapter outlining the contribution which economic theory can make to the design of optimal tax and expenditure systems in developing countries and to the implementation of fiscal reforms. An overview chapter, which also serves as an introduction to the volume, discusses the reasons why LDCs have embarked on fiscal reforms, summarizes the salient findings of the country case studies and assesses the lessons which can be learnt from these empirical studies.Trade Review'This book provides a sound analysis of the experiences of the selected countries. It underscores the developmental debate on the necessity of supporting fiscal policy reforms by promoting administration and human capacity-building. The analysis also delivers important suggestions for the focal points of future development cooperation.' -- Susanne Giwer, Development and CooperationTable of ContentsContents: Preface 1. Overview (C.K. Patel, S. Toh, M. Brownbridge) 2. Fiscal Reform in Developing Countries (D.P. Coady) 3. Trade Policy Reforms and the Government Budget Constraint in Bangladesh (P. Basu, D. Greenaway) 4. Structural Adjustment and Fiscal Reforms in Malawi: An Assessment (P. Basu, C. Milner) 5. Fiscal Adjustment in the Gambia: A Case Study (P. Basu, N. Gemmell) 6. The Fiscal Impact of Adjustment in Tanzania in the 1980s (P. Basu, O. Morrissey) References Index

    £106.00

  • The New Bail-In Legislation: An Analysis of

    Springer Nature Switzerland AG The New Bail-In Legislation: An Analysis of

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisFinancial stability is a pillar of well-functioning financial markets. After the last financial crisis, European policymakers harmonised banking regulation and revised the framework of banking resolution. The introduction of the bail-in legislation is a natural experiment to improve the understanding of banking resolution and how it affected the funding strategies of banks. This book assesses whether financial stability has been strengthened by the change in banks’ resolution policy with a focus on the bail-in. The book shows how banks changed their funding strategies, shrank their balance-sheets and relied more on deposits. The book will discuss inter-alia the mis-selling of bonds, which happened during 2012-2013, analysing whether the bond allocation changed after the bail-in launch. It discusses how the bail-in mechanism was deemed credible by equity holders and argues that the European case would have useful implications for third countries. Finally, the book relates this discussion to the possible collateral effects generated by the new resolution policy during and after the COVID-19 crisis, which will be of particular interest to researchers and policymakers in banking and financial institutions. ​Table of ContentsChapter 1: The new resolution framework.- Chapter 2: Bank funding strategies after the bail-in announcement.- Chapter 3: Risk Allocation and bond misselling after the bail-in directive.- Chapter 4: Bond allocation after the bank resolution cases.- Chapter 5: Market reaction at the resolution events.

    Out of stock

    £999.99

  • Cryptocurrency Compliance and Operations: Digital

    Springer Nature Switzerland AG Cryptocurrency Compliance and Operations: Digital

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisCryptocurrencies and digital assets are increasingly garnering interest from institutional investors. This is on top of the already strong support in place for cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin from the retail investor. With this rapid growth has come a series of complex operational and regulatory compliance challenges. These challenges have become further exacerbated by the increasing pace of technological advances in areas such as decentralized finance (DeFi) tokenization, blockchain and distributed ledger technology (DLT) essential to the crypto and digital asset markets. This book will be the first book to provide current and practical guidance on the operational and compliance foundations of crypto investing and asset management. The book will include: · Step-by-step analysis of the modern operational mechanics behind cryptocurrency investment operations · Detailed guidance and example documentation on the procedures launching a crypto fund · Explanation of the operational procedures and compliance requirements for crytpo asset managers · Detailed analysis of crypto anti-money laundering compliance, regulations and laws for cryptocurrencies · Up-to-date analysis of recent crypto case studies, frauds and regulatory enforcement actions · Review of the digital asset landscape including non-fungible tokens (NFTs) and asset tokenization · Current examples of real-world crypto operations policies and compliance manuals · Analysis of the emerging trends in crypto operations and compliance in areas including blockchain, DeFi, crypto lending, yield farming, crypto mining and dApps Cryptocurrency Compliance and Operations will be an invaluable up-to-date resource for investors, fund managers, and their operations and compliance personnel as well as service providers on the implementation and management of best practice operations.​Table of ContentsCHAPTER 1: Introduction to Cryptocurrency Compliance and Operations.- CHAPTER 2: Procedures for Launching a Crypto Investment Fund.- CHAPTER 3: Operations for Crypto Asset Managers.- CHAPTER 4: Compliance and Governance for Crypto Asset Managers.- CHAPTER 5: Anti-Money Laundering Compliance for Cryptocurrencies.- CHAPTER 6: Crytpocurrency Regulatory Framework and Regulatory Reporting.- CHAPTER 7: Crypto Related Services and Interaction with Blockchain and Distributed Ledger Technology.- CHAPTER 8: Cryptocurrency Compliance and Operations Case Studies.- CHAPTER 9: Decentralized Finance (DeFi) Compliance and Operations.- CHAPTER 10: Investor Due Diligence on Crypto currency and digital asset investments.- CHAPTER 11: Additional crypto operations and compliance topics.- CHAPTER 12: Trends and Future Developments.

    1 in stock

    £47.49

  • Commercial Banking in Transition: A Cross-Country

    Springer International Publishing AG Commercial Banking in Transition: A Cross-Country

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisThe book investigates commercial banking, covering the European framework, the Anglo-Saxon systems, and the Asian area in a comparative approach in trying to answer the following questions: Which is the commercial banking business model of the future? What do we expect a bank to be and to do in the new economic and social reality? How might banking supervision over commercial banks as well as market competition change? The book showcases how three factors or driving forces influence the future of commercial banking: i) fintech innovations (such as artificial intelligence, cryptocurrencies, blockchain, algorithmic trading, machine learning and electronic payments, to name a few), ii) covid-19 measures, and iii) SDG policy priorities. Geared toward academics, scholars and students of banking and financial services, the book will explore how these three factors have different weight in the different legal contexts.Chapter 11 is licensed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.Table of ContentsForeward, by Vittorio Santoro.- Chapter 1 Introduction, by the Editors.- Part I “The EUROPEAN UNION”.- Chapter 2Intermediaries’ model in banking and finance and the treatment of fintech in the European Union: a critical approach, by Patrick Barban.- Chapter 3 FinTech and competition regulatory concerns in the EU banking business framework, by Gabriella Gimigliano.- Chapter 4 Prudential regulation policy responses to financial technological innovations: the future for banks and crypto-finance?, by Iris H-Y Chiu.- Chapter 5 Digitalizing the commercial bank business model: vanishing brank branches and the risk of financial exclusion of the elderly, by Anne-Christine Mittwoch, Anne-Marie Weber, Weronika Herbert-Homenda, and Weronika Stefaniuk.- Chapter 6 The “game changer” in the euro area: Banking Union and commercial banking, by Lucia Quaglia.- Chapter 7 The financing of problem banks: critical issues and challenges ahead, by Marco Bodellini.- Chapter 8 The review of the EU bank crisis management and deposit insurance framework, by Johannes Langthaler.- Chapter 9 Sustainable commercial banking in European Union Law: a renewed mandate for commercial banks?, by Pablo Iglesias Rodriguez.- Chapter 10 Commercial banks and competition concerns – SDG policy priorities, by Lela Mélon and Alenka Recelj Mercina.- Part II “The Anglo-Saxon SYSTEMS”.- Chapter 11 Central Bank Digital Currency and the Agenda of monetary devolution, by Leonidas Zelmanovitz and Bruno Meyerhol Salama.- Chapter 12 Open banking in the UK: a co-opetition scenario for innovation and evolution in the UK retail banking sector, by Nikita Divissenko.- Chapter 13 Rethinking crypto-regulation for crypto-investors in the UK, by Joy Malala and Folashade Adeyemo.- Chapter 14 Cross-border recognition of foreign resolution actions: the statutory regime in the United Kingdom, by Shalina Daved, Clare Merrified & Michael Salib.- Chapter 15 The impact of climate change on the economy and financial system: legal aspects of the Bank of England’s response, by Jack Parker and Ann Corrigan.- Part III “CHINA AND SOUTH KOREA”.- Chapter 16 Chinese commercial banks and fintech-competition and collaboration, by Ding Chen.- Chapter 17 Fintech and banking reform: a perspective from China, by Wang Feimin, Xu Duoqi, and Cheng Xuejn.- Chapter 18 Prudential regulation of the banking-like business of fintech companies in China, by Yangguang Xu and Zhirou Li.- Chapter 19 Recent changes and prospects of banking services regulations and supervision in Korea, by Sung-Seung Yun and GiJin Yan.- Part IV “Looking ahead”.- Chapter 20 Final remarks, by Antonella Brozzetti.

    Out of stock

    £999.99

  • Verträge der Energiewirtschaft

    £116.02

  • Dark Trading: Shedding Light on US and EU

    De Gruyter Dark Trading: Shedding Light on US and EU

    Book SynopsisThis book explores the pressing topic of dark trading. Following new EU legislation regulating financial markets (MiFID II and MiFIR), it traces the development of off-market securities trading (“dark trading”), analyzes economic studies of this development, and positions the resulting regulatory framework of the EU over against that of the US. The study closes with proposals for reform that provide new impetus for further academic discussion.

    £86.45

  • Die Ausübung mitgliedschaftlicher

    Springer Die Ausübung mitgliedschaftlicher

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisIn diesem Open-Access-Buch wird untersucht, wie die Erbengemeinschaft die Mitgliedschaftsrechte in einer Kapitalgesellschaft ausübt und ob das Recht die Erben dabei als einen einzelnen Gesellschafter oder als eine Vielheit von Gesellschaftern behandelt. Philipp Kowalski entwickelt aus einer Untersuchung dieses Rechtsausübungsprozesses heraus eine neue Argumentationslinie zur Bestätigung der gesamthänderischen Verbundenheitslehre, der zufolge je nach berührter Einzelrechtsfrage das eine oder das andere zutreffen kann. Dabei werden die relevanten Einzelfragen des Erbrechts, des Gesellschaftsrechts, des Konzernrechts und des Kapitalmarktrechts in systembildender Weise aufgearbeitet und in ein schlüssiges Gesamtkonzept eingeordnet.Table of ContentsEinleitung.- Die Gesellschafterstellung der Erbengemeinschaft.- Die erbrechtliche Verwaltung des Gesellschaftsanteils.- Die Geltendmachung gegenüber der Gesellschaft.- Die Schranken der Rechtsausübung.- Schluss.- Literaturverzeichnis.

    1 in stock

    £33.24

  • Globalisierung des deutschen

    Springer-Verlag Berlin and Heidelberg GmbH & Co. KG Globalisierung des deutschen

    3 in stock

    Book SynopsisMiles Weber analysiert die Auswirkungen des Gesetzes zur Modernisierung des Körperschaftsteuerrechts (KöMoG) auf das deutsche UmwStG und überprüft dieses im Hinblick auf seine Europarechtskonformität. Dabei wird zunächst auf die zunehmende Internationalisierung des Umwandlungsrechts durch das SEStEG und anschließend durch das KöMoG eingegangen. Die Aufhebung des § 1 Abs. 2 UmwStG im Rahmen des KöMoG führt zu einem globalen Anwendungsbereich des UmwStG für Kapitalgesellschaften, wohingegen § 1 Abs. 4 UmwStG ausschließlich neu formuliert wurde und Personengesellschaften in Drittstaaten deshalb weitgehend von der Anwendung des UmwStG ausgeschlossen sind. Diese Änderungen werden anhand ausgewählter Fallbeispiele in einen praktischen Kontext eingebettet und es wird aufgezeigt, welche globalen Umstrukturierungsmöglichkeiten nunmehr durch das KöMoG geschaffen werden, aber auch welche bis dato nicht steuerneutral möglich sind. Die dadurch gewonnenen Erkenntnisse bilden die Grundlage für die anschließende kritische Würdigung, in der anhand der Darlegung der Besteuerungsgrundsätze der EU wesentliche Problemfelder des UmwStG aufgedeckt werden.Table of ContentsAusgangslage und Abgrenzung der Thematik.- Grundlagen des deutschen Umwandlungsrechts.- Europäisierung durch das SEStEG.- (Teil-)Globalisierung durch das KöMoG.- Kritische Würdigung.- Fazit und Ausblick.

    3 in stock

    £49.49

  • Understanding Regulation

    Oxford University Press Understanding Regulation

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisBased on cross-national and cross-sectoral case studies, the revised and updated second edition of this seminal and successful text provides a multi-disciplinary introduction to key debates in regulation, including fundamental and institutional strategies and issues surrounding the design and operation of regulatory institutions.Trade ReviewReview from previous edition It is an excellently constructed work, and provides much food for thought for the times in which we live. * New Law Journal *The book is well researched and written with enough conviction to make a valuable contribution in developing our understanding of the choices regulation presents us with and the potential of new regulatory arrangements going forward. * Matthew Berry, Financial Adviser Careers Extra *Some of the material is very useful and not easily available in textbook form elsewhere ... a good way of catching up on the reforms in a variety of policy sectors and thinking in different disciplines. * Public Administration *Table of ContentsPART I: FUNDAMENTALS; PART II: STRATEGIES; PART III: RULES AND ENFORCEMENT; PART IV: QUALITY AND EVALUATION; PART V: REGULATION AT DIFFERENT LEVELS OF GOVERNMENT; PART VI: NETWORK ISSUES; PART VII: CONCLUSIONS

    15 in stock

    £90.25

  • Law and Finance after the Financial Crisis

    Taylor & Francis Ltd Law and Finance after the Financial Crisis

    15 in stock

    a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.

    15 in stock

    £43.99

  • International Challenges in Investment Arbitration

    Taylor & Francis International Challenges in Investment Arbitration

    15 in stock

    a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.

    15 in stock

    £43.69

  • Cyber Crime Security and Digital Intelligence

    Taylor & Francis Ltd Cyber Crime Security and Digital Intelligence

    15 in stock

    a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.

    15 in stock

    £39.99

  • Managerial Fraud

    Taylor & Francis Managerial Fraud

    15 in stock

    a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.

    15 in stock

    £39.99

  • The Role of Law and Regulation in Sustaining Financial Markets

    Taylor & Francis The Role of Law and Regulation in Sustaining Financial Markets

    15 in stock

    a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.

    15 in stock

    £39.99

  • Blockchain Technology and the Law

    Taylor & Francis Blockchain Technology and the Law

    15 in stock

    a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.

    15 in stock

    £120.00

  • Conduct and Pay in the Financial Services Industry

    Taylor & Francis Conduct and Pay in the Financial Services Industry

    15 in stock

    a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.

    15 in stock

    £209.00

  • International Natural Resources Law Investment and Sustainability

    Taylor & Francis International Natural Resources Law Investment and Sustainability

    15 in stock

    a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.

    15 in stock

    £39.99

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd Financial Regulation

    15 in stock

    a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.

    15 in stock

    £166.25

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd Financial Regulation

    15 in stock

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    15 in stock

    £58.89

  • Taylor & Francis Reforming the Governance of the Financial Sector

    15 in stock

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    15 in stock

    £142.50

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd Fighting Financial Crime in the Global Economic Crisis

    15 in stock

    a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.

    15 in stock

    £137.75

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