Scope of the law chosen: issues, definitions and internationalityExpress agreement in either of two formsThe Qualifying Office requirement   The fall-back rulesPre-Convention agreements    相似文献   

2.
  Dr Sharon Brown-Hruska and Robert S. Zwirb Unspecified boundaries in the commodities, derivatives and securitieslaw have not only increased the discretion of individual regulatoryauthorities, but have also resulted in expanded and often overlappingassertions of jurisdiction by the Securities and Exchange Commission(SEC), the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, the FederalEnergy Regulatory Commission and other authorities. The SEChas recently sought to expand its jurisdiction into the derivativesmarkets to seek registration  相似文献   

3.
  Patents  Amendment of claims that narrow scope can infringe Article123(2) EPC (Polyionic transition metal catalyst composition—interpartes Board 3.3.03, T-0097/05 of 31 May 2007)72 Use of a disclaimer in order to overcome the Article 123(2)and Article 123(3) EPC ‘trap’ (A collecting bagfor human body wastes—inter partes Board 3.2.02, T-1180/05of 2 August 2007)72 Soya thought your  相似文献   

4.
How to compare regulatory regimes     
Wood  Philip R. 《Capital Markets Law Journal》2007,2(4):332-344
The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below.
It is the policy of this Journal to only publish material thathas not been published previously. However, an exception hasbeen made with this article as the work from which it has beendrawn has only recently published. This article is taken fromPhilip Wood's Regulation of International Finance, one of aseries of nine works by Philip Wood on the law of practice ofInternational Finance, published by Sweet & Maxwell in 2007.Philip Wood is a member of the Editorial Board of Capital MarketsLaw Journal. Many readers of Capital Markets Law Journal aroundthe world will not have had the chance to read this very topicalarticle which is of exceptional quality and Capital MarketsLaw Journal is very pleased to make it available to the widercapital markets community.                 TheEditors
Key points
  • This article examines the criteria which might usefullybe . . . [Full Text of this Article]
 
                Identity and independence of regulatorsCodification of the lawCriminalization of the lawXenophobia and protectionismDegree of investor protectionFreedom index      相似文献   

5.
The Implications of the ASLEF Case     
Ewing  Keith 《Industrial Law Journal》2007,36(4):425-445
The decision of the European Court of Human Rights in ASLEFv United Kingdom (27 February 2007) will require the governmentto re-visit the law relating to the right of trade unions toexclude and expel individuals because of their membership ofpolitical organisations perceived by trade unions to be hostileto their interests. It is now clear—as was pointed outat the time—that the changes made by the Employment RelationsAct 2004 do not go far enough to meet obligations under theEuropean Convention on Human Rights (ECHR). However, the casealso raises much wider questions about the compatibility ofother statutory restraints on trade union autonomy with Article11 of the ECHR, notably ss 64–67 (on unjustifiable discipline)and 174–177 (on exclusion and expulsion as a whole, andnot only the measures relating to membership of hostile politicalparties). This article considers both the immediate and thewider implications of the ASLEF decision for British trade unionlaw, in the context of what appears to be a greater willingnessof the Strasbourg Court to listen more carefully to trade uniongrievances than in the past. The article also draws attentionto the role of litigation as a trade union strategy to recoverlost rights, and again emphasises the importance of InternationalLabour Organisation Convention 87 and the Council of Europe'sSocial Charter of 1961 (as well as the jurisprudence thereunder)as important sources in the construction of the ECHR, Article11.  相似文献   

6.
Hedge fund regulation, market discipline and the Hedge Fund Working Group     
McVea  Harry 《Capital Markets Law Journal》2009,4(1):63-84
The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below. Key points
  • Against a general background of suspicion, criticismand even hostility, the recently formed Hedge Fund Working Group(HFWG), comprising 14 leading fund managers based mainly inthe United Kingdom, published their Final Report in January2008.
  • The Report is based on standards of best practice (the‘Standards’ of which there are 28) that are, inthe final analysis, to be administered by a newly establishedHedge Fund Standards Board (HFSB)—a self-regulatory bodycharged with the responsibility of keeping the Standards up-to-dateand ‘fit for purpose’.
  • Borrowing from both theFinancial Services Authority's Principles for Business, whichrepresent bold statements of good business practice within theUK's financial services sector, and the Combined Code on CorporateGovernance's voluntary approach of ‘comply or explain’,the Standards are heralded by the HFWG as ‘an exercisein market discipline, based on disclosure’.
  • The unprecedentednature of recent financial market . . . [Full Text of this Article]
 
                   相似文献   

7.
Treaty Interpretation and the WTO Appellate Body Report in US - Gambling: A Critique   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Ortino  Federico 《Journal of International Economic Law》2006,9(1):117-148
‘Before the game begins players should agree on a dictionaryto use in case of a challenge.’ (from the Official Rulesof SCRABBLE®)
Treaty interpretation in WTO law continues to represent a topicof highly theoretical and practical importance. The Panel’sand the Appellate Body’s reports in the recent US –Gambling dispute have critically turned on ascertaining themeaning of the United States’ GATS Schedule and ArticleXVI GATS on the basis of the public international law rulesof treaty interpretation as codified in the Vienna Conventionon the Law of Treaties. The paper’s principal aim is toreview the interpretative approach followed in particular bythe Appellate Body in reaching its decision in US – Gambling.Its main argument is that, although the Appellate Body appearsto be trying to emancipate itself from a rigorous textual approach,it has not yet embraced a holistic approach to treaty interpretation,one in which the treaty interpreter looks thoroughly at allthe relevant elements of the general rule on treaty interpretationpursuant to Article 31(1) of the Vienna Convention.  相似文献   

8.
Overcoming the challenges posted by technology to traditional copyright law: from Betamax to Grokster     
Wadhwa  Anirudh 《Jnl of Intellectual Property Law & Pract》2007,2(7):487-491
Legal context: Dual use technology, or technology which can be used for bothinfringing and non-infringing uses, raises interesting issuesin the area of copyright law. This note analyses inter aliathe two US Supreme Court decisions on dual use technology, separatedby a gap of over 20 years—Sony v Universal Studios (1984)and MGM v Grokster (2005). Key points: Sony lays down the famous ‘Betamax’ defence—ifthe technology is ‘capable of substantial non-infringinguses’, then it cannot be challenged as infringing. Thistest had stood the test of time, and it is only recently inGrokster that there arose an occasion to reconsider its application.The Court in Grokster, borrowing from the jurisprudence developedin Patent law, recognized a novel test of liability—basedon the active ‘inducement’ to infringe. The flawin Grokster is that despite its attempt to develop new standardsfor a digital age, the ruling leaves areas of uncertainty. Practical significance: Dual use technology has become ubiquitous in this age—fromthe iPod to YouTube to P2P software, all are capable of beingused in lawful as well as unlawful ways. Legal pronouncementshave the potential to impact not just the development of law,but also innovation in technology. Some believe that the ‘brightline’ of Sony has been muddled thereby threatening technologicalinnovation. Others, me included, believe that Sony is inapplicablein the face of new technology, and hail the decision in Groksteras a positive step forward in what it actually decides. However,in what it does not decide, Grokster still represents a lostopportunity by the Court to clear up the muddled waters.  相似文献   

9.
Does Dworkin Commit Dworkin's Fallacy?: A Reply to Justice in Robes     
Green  Michael Steven 《Oxford Journal of Legal Studies》2008,28(1):33-55
In an article entitled ‘Dworkin's Fallacy, Or What thePhilosophy of Language Can't Teach Us about the Law’,I argued that in Law's Empire Ronald Dworkin misderived hisinterpretive theory of law from an implicit interpretive theoryof meaning, thereby committing ‘Dworkin's fallacy’.In his recent book, Justice in Robes, Dworkin denies that hecommitted the fallacy. As evidence he points to the fact thathe considered three theories of law—‘conventionalism’,‘pragmatism’ and ‘law as integrity’—inLaw's Empire. Only the last of these is interpretive, but each,he argues, is compatible with his interpretive theory of meaning,which he describes as the view that ‘the doctrinal conceptof law is an interpretive concept’. In this Reply, I arguethat Dworkin's argument that he does not commit Dworkin's fallacyis itself an example of the fallacy and that Dworkin's fallacypervades Justice in Robes just as much as it did Law's Empire.  相似文献   

10.
Underwriters' counsel as gatekeeper or turnstile: an empirical analysis of law firm prestige and performance in IPOs     
Barondes.  Royce de R; Nyce  Charles; Sanger  Gary C. 《Capital Markets Law Journal》2007,2(2):164-190
The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below. Key points
  • The article investigates the relationship betweenpricing in an initial public offering (IPO) and the prestigeof the participating underwriters’ law firm.
  • The hypothesisof the article is that law firm quality affects how law firmsperform their obligations in IPOs—more prestigious lawfirms acting more independently. Consistent with this hypothesis,the authors find a negative relationship between pre-IPO priceadjustment and the participation of prestigious underwriters’counsel, and a negative relationship between the participationof prestigious underwriters’ counsel and initial return,which is consistent with market trading reflecting the decreasedrisk associated with offerings involving prestigious underwriters’counsel.
  • Finally, it is found that certain observable characteristicsindicating diminished likelihood of undisclosed negative information(venture backing and quality of the issuer's counsel) are associatedwith an increased likelihood that prestigious underwriters’counsel is used.
 
  Scholarship describes professionals who participate in securitiesofferings, and who represent public companies in . . . [Full Text of this Article]     Theories of IPO pricingRelationship between pre-IPO price adjustment and diligence in legal servicesExtension of Hanley's modelConservative model—only a portion of the impact is identifiedIssuer's counsel v underwriters’ counselConfirming proper model specificationIncreased risk of an investment in the issuer affecting probability of engagement of quality law firmDifferent signs between issuer's lawyer and underwriters’ lawyer   Summary statisticsMeasure of law firm prestige
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1.
The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below. Key points
  • Transactions involving intermediated securities –ie securities that are held in an account with a broker, bank,clearing agency or other intermediary – demand a highdegree of ex ante legal certainty. However, for intermediatedsecurities accounts and transactions that reach across bordersas is increasingly prevalent, the traditional conflicts of lawrules for many of the most important commercial law issues failto provide this certainty.
  • The Hague Securities Conventionprovides a modern and practical approach for determining theapplicable law. In most cases, the express terms of the agreementbetween the applicable account holder and its intermediary willbe determinative, including as against third parties, providedthat at the time of the agreement the intermediary is engagedin the business of maintaining securities accounts in the specifiedjurisdiction. The Convention is expected to be ratified in somenations fairly soon.
  • Once the Convention becomes effective,it . . . [Full Text of this Article]
 
   1. The Convention as a response to evolving markets    2. Certainty as to applicable law as the result of express agreement    3. Fall-back rules and pre-Convention agreements    4. Conclusion    Legal clarity and regulatory discretion—exploring the law and economics of insider trading in derivatives markets (see p. 245)    Current intelligence – by subject    1. Jurisdictions of the world    2. Legal families for the purposes of financial law    3. Characteristics of measurement criteria    4. General financial law criteria    5. Application of general criteria to legal systems    6. Legal and political infrastructure as a criterion    7. Commonality of underlying regulatory law    8. Criteria for measuring regulatory law    9. Comparison of the US and the UK    10. Background influences on the regulatory regime    1. Introduction    2. Disclosure (including ‘side letters’)    3. Valuation concerns    4. Risk management    5. Fund governance    6. Market abuse    7. Activism    8. An assessment    9. Conclusion    1. Introduction    2. Background    3. Modelling law firm impact in IPOs    4. Data