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This edited volume examines the impact of the metaverse on finance and law. As the commercial development of the internet and digital technology has done for more than thirty years, the metaverse phenomenon raises questions about the relevance of existing legal rules in dealing with new practices: between the need for adaptation, evolution, or new rules. While the Blockchain ecosystem has developed steadily over the last few years and its applications are still evolving, can we assume that the metaverse will become "the most prodigious phenomenon of the 21st century"? The term metaverse refers…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This edited volume examines the impact of the metaverse on finance and law. As the commercial development of the internet and digital technology has done for more than thirty years, the metaverse phenomenon raises questions about the relevance of existing legal rules in dealing with new practices: between the need for adaptation, evolution, or new rules. While the Blockchain ecosystem has developed steadily over the last few years and its applications are still evolving, can we assume that the metaverse will become "the most prodigious phenomenon of the 21st century"? The term metaverse refers to a virtual world. Technically, using known but evolving technologies, the term refers to a network of 3D virtual worlds. In its current state of development, there is a metaverse and not a single virtual world as there is an internal one, simply because its development is still dependent on proprietary technologies. The development of the metaverse is no less accurate, and a few recent examples suggest that lawyers will not be able to escape this phenomenon, which looks set to involve individuals, companies, and institutions. The financial world is not immune to the emergence of the metaverse either. Traditional finance is moving into new virtual worlds. Several banks and insurance companies are entering this world, far removed from their traditions. Some have even set up branches there. However, what are these financial institutions trying to achieve by entering this market segment? This book addresses these questions with contributions from academics and experts from both fields.

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Autorenporträt
Dr. Nadia Mansour is a finance doctor. She is an assistant at The University of Sousse-Tunisia, a visiting researcher, and a post-doctor at the University of Salamanca- Spain. Dr. Nadia is an expert in sustainable finance at UNDP. She is a trainer at CREACT4MED, a trainer of trainers with USAID Job and Erasmus. Her research interests focus on Finance, sustainable development, and Innovation. She is an academic member and ambassador of the Communication Institute of Greece, a conference chairperson, a committee member of indexed conferences, an Editorial Board Member of IGI GLOBAL, Taylor & Francis, and Springer, a reviewer in IGI Global, Emerald, and Wiley. She has presented various scientific papers at international (France, Morocco, USA, Turkey) and national conferences. She is also a keynote speaker and session chair at several conferences in Turkey, India, UAE, and Spain. She has several published articles in ranked journals and chapters (IGI Global, Emerald, Springer, Palgrave Macmillan) and edited books (Taylor & Francis, Springer, IGI Global, Emerald). Lorenzo M. Bujosa Vadell is a professor of procedural law at the university of Salamanca (Spain). He is president of the Ibero-American Institute of Procedural Law, and member of the International Association of Procedural Law and the International Association of Criminal Law. He is the coordinator of the PhD program "Administration, Justice and Finance in the Social State" at the University of Salamanca. He has enjoyed research stays at the Universities of Kansas (USA), Florence (Italy), and Trier (Germany).