Book contents
- International Economic Law after the Global Crisis
- International Economic Law after the Global Crisis
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Tables
- Contributors
- Preface
- 1 The fragmented disciplines of international economic law after the global financial and economic crisis: an introduction
- Part I Monetary cooperation, trade and finance
- 2 Does financial law suffer from a systemic failure? A study of the fragmentation of legal sources
- 3 Credit rating agencies: the development of global standards
- 4 The broken glass of European integration: origins and remedies of the Eurozone crisis and implications for global markets
- 5 Fromregional fragmentation to coherence: a way forward for East Asia
- 6 ‘Thelaw works itself pure’: the fragmented disciplines of global trade and monetary cooperation, and the Chinese currency problem
- Part II Trade and some of its linkages
- Part III Investment law and intellectual property protection
- Part IV Aspects of climate change regulation
- Part V Concluding observations
- Index
2 - Does financial law suffer from a systemic failure? A study of the fragmentation of legal sources
from Part I - Monetary cooperation, trade and finance
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 May 2015
- International Economic Law after the Global Crisis
- International Economic Law after the Global Crisis
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Tables
- Contributors
- Preface
- 1 The fragmented disciplines of international economic law after the global financial and economic crisis: an introduction
- Part I Monetary cooperation, trade and finance
- 2 Does financial law suffer from a systemic failure? A study of the fragmentation of legal sources
- 3 Credit rating agencies: the development of global standards
- 4 The broken glass of European integration: origins and remedies of the Eurozone crisis and implications for global markets
- 5 Fromregional fragmentation to coherence: a way forward for East Asia
- 6 ‘Thelaw works itself pure’: the fragmented disciplines of global trade and monetary cooperation, and the Chinese currency problem
- Part II Trade and some of its linkages
- Part III Investment law and intellectual property protection
- Part IV Aspects of climate change regulation
- Part V Concluding observations
- Index
Summary
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- International Economic Law after the Global CrisisA Tale of Fragmented Disciplines, pp. 33 - 45Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2015
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