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The mushrooming of trade agreements and their interlinkages with environmental governance calls for new research on the trade and environment interface. The more than 700 existing preferential trade agreements (PTAs) include ever more diverse and far-reaching environmental provisions. While missed opportunities remain and harmful provisions persist, numerous environmental provisions in PTAs entail promising potential. They promote the implementation of environmental treaties and cover numerous environmental issues. New concepts, data, and methods, including detailed content analysis across multiple institutions, are needed to explain these interlinkages and understand whether and how PTAs with environmental provisions can contribute to tackling global environmental challenges. Making use of the most extensive coding of environmental provisions in PTAs to date and combining quantitative data with qualitative analyses, this Element provides a comprehensive yet fine-grained picture of the drivers and effects of environmental provisions in PTAs. This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core.
In addition to cybersecurity, the digitisation and datafication of finance at the centre of FinTech raise a range of data-related risks, in particular to data security and privacy (the focus of Chapter 17) and also from concentration and the emergence of new Systemically Important Financial Institutions (SIFIs) in the form of digital finance platforms, TechFins and BigTechs. These new entrants bring with them a range of regulatory challenges we analyse here.
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