Global finance in the 21st century : stability and sustainability in a fragmenting world / Steve Kourabas.

By: Kourabas, Steve.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookSeries: Routledge research in finance and banking law: Publisher: London ; New York : Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group, 2022Copyright date: �2022Description: 1 online resource.Content type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9781000450958; 1000450953; 9780429329708; 0429329709; 9781000451047; 1000451046.Call No.: K1066 Subject(s): Finance -- Law and legislation | Law and globalization | LAW / Business & Financial | LAW / Banking | LAW / Commercial / International TradeAdditional physical formats: Print version:: Global finance in the 21st century.DDC classification: 332.042 Online resources: EBSCOhost
Contents:
Introduction: How do you solve a problem like global finance? -- The role of finance in society : from barter to Fintech -- Twenty-first century post-crisis finance : stability and sustainability as new 'meta' norms or market re-emergence? -- Financial regulation in (global) context -- A 'micro' approach to a 'macro' problem : the ongoing challenges of global finance in a resurgent state-based world -- A modern treaty-based regime for systemic financial stability and sustainable development.
Bibliography, etc. Note: Includes bibliographical references and index.Local Note(s): WorldCat record variable field(s) change: 650Summary: Global Finance in the 21st Century: Stability and Sustainability in a Fragmenting World explains finance and its regulation after the global financial crisis. The book introduces non-finance scholars into the wider debate regarding the conduct and regulation of finance to encourage broader discussion on important societal issues that relate to finance. The book also explores the ineffectiveness of the current approach to global prudential governance and places this discussion within the more expansive context of global governance and nationalism in the twenty-first century. The book argues that fragmentation and the growing trend of promoting informality and voluntarism has facilitated a return to nationalism as a primary form of global governance that acts contrary to post-crisis reforms that seek to promote stability and sustainability in the conduct of finance. As a remedy, Kourabas suggests that we need more, not less, of what we have traditionally conceived as international law - treaties and treaty-based international organisations. In the field of finance, this means not only pursuing financial liberalisation through free trade and investment treaties, but also the inclusion of provisions in these treaties that promotes systemic financial stability and sustainable development objectives. Of interest to legal and non-legal academics and students, legal professionals and policy-makers, this book offers a nuanced defence of international law as an approach to global governance in finance and beyond, as well as reform of international law to meet the needs of twenty-first century society.
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Includes bibliographical references and index.

Introduction: How do you solve a problem like global finance? -- The role of finance in society : from barter to Fintech -- Twenty-first century post-crisis finance : stability and sustainability as new 'meta' norms or market re-emergence? -- Financial regulation in (global) context -- A 'micro' approach to a 'macro' problem : the ongoing challenges of global finance in a resurgent state-based world -- A modern treaty-based regime for systemic financial stability and sustainable development.

Global Finance in the 21st Century: Stability and Sustainability in a Fragmenting World explains finance and its regulation after the global financial crisis. The book introduces non-finance scholars into the wider debate regarding the conduct and regulation of finance to encourage broader discussion on important societal issues that relate to finance. The book also explores the ineffectiveness of the current approach to global prudential governance and places this discussion within the more expansive context of global governance and nationalism in the twenty-first century. The book argues that fragmentation and the growing trend of promoting informality and voluntarism has facilitated a return to nationalism as a primary form of global governance that acts contrary to post-crisis reforms that seek to promote stability and sustainability in the conduct of finance. As a remedy, Kourabas suggests that we need more, not less, of what we have traditionally conceived as international law - treaties and treaty-based international organisations. In the field of finance, this means not only pursuing financial liberalisation through free trade and investment treaties, but also the inclusion of provisions in these treaties that promotes systemic financial stability and sustainable development objectives. Of interest to legal and non-legal academics and students, legal professionals and policy-makers, this book offers a nuanced defence of international law as an approach to global governance in finance and beyond, as well as reform of international law to meet the needs of twenty-first century society.

Steve Kourabas teaches Corporations Law and is Deputy Director at the Centre for Commercial Law and Regulatory Studies at Monash Law School, Australia. Steve received an LLM and and and SJD from Duke University School of Law.

WorldCat record variable field(s) change: 650

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