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Regulating global financial markets.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal article

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Standard

Regulating global financial markets. / Picciotto, Salomone; Haines, Jason.
In: Journal of Law and Society, Vol. 26, No. 3, 09.1999, p. 351-368.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal article

Harvard

Picciotto, S & Haines, J 1999, 'Regulating global financial markets.', Journal of Law and Society, vol. 26, no. 3, pp. 351-368. <http://www.jstor.org/stable/1410749>

APA

Picciotto, S., & Haines, J. (1999). Regulating global financial markets. Journal of Law and Society, 26(3), 351-368. http://www.jstor.org/stable/1410749

Vancouver

Picciotto S, Haines J. Regulating global financial markets. Journal of Law and Society. 1999 Sept;26(3):351-368.

Author

Picciotto, Salomone ; Haines, Jason. / Regulating global financial markets. In: Journal of Law and Society. 1999 ; Vol. 26, No. 3. pp. 351-368.

Bibtex

@article{60bea75640da4b2ab3dd14d77324d819,
title = "Regulating global financial markets.",
abstract = "This paper discusses the role of regulation in the emergence of a global system of linked financial markets. It traces the origins of the internationalization of financial markets to the emergence of new competitive pressures, rooted in changes in the social structures of savings and investment, breaking down both national systems of financial control and international arrangements for monetary and financial co-ordination. These changes have been accompanied and facilitated by a process of international re-regulation, through informal specialist networks. Although these have facilitated the international diffusion of regulatory standards and practices, and attempted to co-ordinate them, they are greatly hampered by espousing the perspectives of the various markets and firms which it is their task to supervise. Together with their minimalist view of the aims of public legitimation and oversight of financial markets, they have proved inadequate to prevent the destabilizing effects of the new global finance on the world economy.",
author = "Salomone Picciotto and Jason Haines",
year = "1999",
month = sep,
language = "English",
volume = "26",
pages = "351--368",
journal = "Journal of Law and Society",
issn = "1467-6478",
publisher = "Wiley",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Regulating global financial markets.

AU - Picciotto, Salomone

AU - Haines, Jason

PY - 1999/9

Y1 - 1999/9

N2 - This paper discusses the role of regulation in the emergence of a global system of linked financial markets. It traces the origins of the internationalization of financial markets to the emergence of new competitive pressures, rooted in changes in the social structures of savings and investment, breaking down both national systems of financial control and international arrangements for monetary and financial co-ordination. These changes have been accompanied and facilitated by a process of international re-regulation, through informal specialist networks. Although these have facilitated the international diffusion of regulatory standards and practices, and attempted to co-ordinate them, they are greatly hampered by espousing the perspectives of the various markets and firms which it is their task to supervise. Together with their minimalist view of the aims of public legitimation and oversight of financial markets, they have proved inadequate to prevent the destabilizing effects of the new global finance on the world economy.

AB - This paper discusses the role of regulation in the emergence of a global system of linked financial markets. It traces the origins of the internationalization of financial markets to the emergence of new competitive pressures, rooted in changes in the social structures of savings and investment, breaking down both national systems of financial control and international arrangements for monetary and financial co-ordination. These changes have been accompanied and facilitated by a process of international re-regulation, through informal specialist networks. Although these have facilitated the international diffusion of regulatory standards and practices, and attempted to co-ordinate them, they are greatly hampered by espousing the perspectives of the various markets and firms which it is their task to supervise. Together with their minimalist view of the aims of public legitimation and oversight of financial markets, they have proved inadequate to prevent the destabilizing effects of the new global finance on the world economy.

M3 - Journal article

VL - 26

SP - 351

EP - 368

JO - Journal of Law and Society

JF - Journal of Law and Society

SN - 1467-6478

IS - 3

ER -