Available Formats
Regulating Fraud Across Borders: Internationalised Criminal Law Protection of Capital Markets
By (Author) Edgardo Rotman
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Hart Publishing
15th April 2021
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Comparative law
Banking law
345.0263
Hardback
216
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
481g
This book provides a uniquely comparative approach to the examination of financial crime regulation. At a time when financial crime routinely crosses international boundaries, this book provides a novel understanding of its spread and criminalisation. It traces the international convergence of financial crime regulation with a uniquely comparative approach that examines key institutional and state actors including the European Union, the International Organization of Securities Commissions, as well as the United States, the United Kingdom, Switzerland, France, Italy and Germany, all countries that harbour some of the most influential stock exchanges in the Western world. The book describes and documents the phenomenon of internationalisation of securities frauds such as insider trading and market manipulation and the laws criminalising those acts, most notably those responding to recent dramatic transformations in securities markets, high frequency trading, and benchmark manipulation. At the European level, it shows the progressive uniformisation of laws culminating in the 2014 European Union Market Abuse Regulation. The book argues that criminal prohibitions against internationalised market abuse must be understood as an economic and legal imperative to protect financial markets against activities that imperil its integrity, compromising the confidence of investors and thus affecting the economy as a whole. The book is supported by an extensive review of the most significant scholarship in each country.
Edgardo Rotman is Senior Lecturer in International and Comparative Law Emeritus at the University of Miami School of Law, USA.