How to compare regulatory regimes |
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Authors: | Wood Philip R. |
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Affiliation: | * Philip Wood is Special Global Counsel at Allen & Overy LLP, Visiting Professor in International Financial Law at Oxford, Yorke Distinguished Fellow at Cambridge and Visiting Professor at London School of Economics and Political Science and at Queen Mary College, University of London. |
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Abstract: | 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]
| 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 | Identity and independence of regulators Codification of the law Criminalization of the law Xenophobia and protectionism Degree of investor protection Freedom index 9. Comparison of the US and the UK | 10. Background influences on the regulatory regime |
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