Soft Law and the Global Financial System: Rule Making in the 21st Century

Soft Law and the Global Financial System: Rule Making in the 21st Century

by Chris Brummer
Soft Law and the Global Financial System: Rule Making in the 21st Century

Soft Law and the Global Financial System: Rule Making in the 21st Century

by Chris Brummer

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Overview

The global financial crisis of 2008 has given way to a proliferation of international agreements aimed at strengthening the prudential oversight and supervision of financial market participants. Yet how these rules operate is not well understood. Because international financial rules are expressed through informal, non-binding accords, scholars tend to view them as either weak treaty substitutes or by-products of national power. Rarely, if ever, are they cast as independent variables that can inform the behavior of regulators and market participants alike. This book explains how international financial law 'works' - and presents an alternative theory for understanding its purpose, operation and limitations. Drawing on a close institutional analysis of the post-crisis financial architecture, it argues that international financial law is often bolstered by a range of reputational, market and institutional mechanisms that make it more coercive than classical theories of international law predict.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781139209632
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication date: 12/26/2011
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Chris Brummer is a Professor of Law at Georgetown University and a Senior Fellow at the Milken Institute. He has also taught, or is slated to teach, at several leading universities as a visiting professor, including the universities of Basel, Heidelberg and the London School of Economics. Brummer's writings have appeared in many leading journals including the California Law Review, the University of Chicago Law Review, the Georgetown Law Journal, the Southern California Law Review and the Vanderbilt Law Review. Before becoming a professor, he practised law in the New York and London offices of Cravath, Swaine and Moore LLP.

Table of Contents

1. The perils of global finance; 2. Territoriality and financial statecraft; 3. The architecture of international financial law; 4. A compliance-based theory of international financial law; 5. How legitimate is international financial law?; 6. Soft law and the global financial crisis; 7. The future of international financial law.
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