Christopher McCrudden (ed.)
Regulation and Deregulation
Policy and Practice in the Utilities and Financial Services Industries
Herausgeber: Mccrudden, Christopher; McCrudden, C.
Christopher McCrudden (ed.)
Regulation and Deregulation
Policy and Practice in the Utilities and Financial Services Industries
Herausgeber: Mccrudden, Christopher; McCrudden, C.
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Regulation and Deregulation is a revised version of papers presented at the Oxford Law Colloquium held at St John's College, Oxford, in March 1998. The Colloquium provided a meeting place for discussion between practitioners and academics interested in regulation. Current themes in the debate about how best to regulate are explored, concentrating in particular on the regulation of utilities and of the banking and financial services industry.
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Regulation and Deregulation is a revised version of papers presented at the Oxford Law Colloquium held at St John's College, Oxford, in March 1998. The Colloquium provided a meeting place for discussion between practitioners and academics interested in regulation. Current themes in the debate about how best to regulate are explored, concentrating in particular on the regulation of utilities and of the banking and financial services industry.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 452
- Erscheinungstermin: 25. Februar 1999
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 25mm
- Gewicht: 807g
- ISBN-13: 9780198268819
- ISBN-10: 0198268815
- Artikelnr.: 22938541
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 452
- Erscheinungstermin: 25. Februar 1999
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 25mm
- Gewicht: 807g
- ISBN-13: 9780198268819
- ISBN-10: 0198268815
- Artikelnr.: 22938541
Christopher McCrudden is Reader in Law and Fellow of Lincoln College, Oxford. He co-edited Individual Rights and the Law in Britain (OUP, 1995) and his book on public procurement and equal opportunities in the EC is forthcoming from the Press.
* 1: Christopher McCrudden, Reader in Law, Oxford University; Fellow,
Lincoln College, Oxford: Regulation and Deregulation: An Introduction
* PART 1: REGULATION AND DEREGULATION: GENERAL ISSUES
* 2: Anthony Ogus, Professor of Law, University of Manchester; Research
Professor, University of Maastricht: Corrective Taxation as a
Regulatory Instrument
* 3: Karen Yeung, Linnells Lecturer in Commercial Law, Oxford
University; Fellow of St Anne's College, Oxford: The Private
Enforcement of Competition Law
* 4: Doreen McBarnet, Oxford Centre for Socio-Legal Studies and
Christopher Whelan, University of Warwick Law School: Challenging the
Regulators: Strategies for Resisting Control
* 5: Anne Davies, Fellow, All Souls College, Oxford: Using Contracts to
Enforce Standards: The Case of Waiting Times in the NHS
* 6: Julia Black, Law Department, LSE: Using Rules Effectively
* 7: Paul Craig, Professor of Law, University of Oxford: Regulation and
Judicial Review: Perspectives from UK and EC Law
* 8: Mark Freedland, Professor of Law, University of Oxford: Public Law
and Private Finance: Placing the Private Finance Initiative in a
Public Law Frame
* PART 2: REGULATING UTILITIES
* 9: John Swift QC, Rail Regulator, Office of the Rail: Transparency,
Consistency and Predictability as Regulatory Objectives
* 10: Allan Merry, Legal Adviser to the Director General, Office of
Water Services: Transparency, Confidentiality and Freedom of
Information
* 11: Gillian Holding, Partner, Addleshaw Booth and Co, Leeds:
Transparency: Of Business or Process?
* 12: Derek Ridyard, Director, National Economic Research Associates:
Regulation of Price Discrimination and Predation by Dominant Firms:
Lessons from the Ofgas Valueplus Decision
* 13: Michael Grenfell, Solicitor, Norton Rose, London: Can Competition
Law Supplant Utilities Regulation?
* 14: Margaret Bloom, Director of Competition Policy, Office of Fair
Trading: The Impact of the Competition Bill
* 15: Kevin Coates, DG IV Competition, European Commission: Regulating
the Telecommunications Sector: Substituting Practical Cooperation for
the Risks of Competition
* 16: Christopher McCrudden: Social Policy and Economic Regulators:
Some Issues from the Reform of Utility Regulation
* PART 3: REGULATING BANKING AND FINANCIAL SERVICES
* 17: Richard Lindsey, Director of Division of Marketing Regulation,
Securities and Exchange Commission: Efficient Regulation of the
Securities Market
* 18: Brian Quinn, Bank of England: A Model of Financial Regulation
* 19: David KY Tang and Christopher G Weinstein, Preston, Gates and
Ellis: Electronic Commerce: American and International Proposals for
Legal Structures
* 20: Jane Coakley, Executive Director, Morgan Stanley UK Group: Trends
in Financial Services Influences on the Approach to Regulation
* 21: Tim Polgase, Partner, Norton Rose, London: Globalisation and
Implications for cross-border Regulation
* 22: Howell E Jackson, Professor of Law, Harvard Law School: The
Selective Incorporation of Foreign Legal Systems to Promote Nepal as
an International Financial Services Centre
Lincoln College, Oxford: Regulation and Deregulation: An Introduction
* PART 1: REGULATION AND DEREGULATION: GENERAL ISSUES
* 2: Anthony Ogus, Professor of Law, University of Manchester; Research
Professor, University of Maastricht: Corrective Taxation as a
Regulatory Instrument
* 3: Karen Yeung, Linnells Lecturer in Commercial Law, Oxford
University; Fellow of St Anne's College, Oxford: The Private
Enforcement of Competition Law
* 4: Doreen McBarnet, Oxford Centre for Socio-Legal Studies and
Christopher Whelan, University of Warwick Law School: Challenging the
Regulators: Strategies for Resisting Control
* 5: Anne Davies, Fellow, All Souls College, Oxford: Using Contracts to
Enforce Standards: The Case of Waiting Times in the NHS
* 6: Julia Black, Law Department, LSE: Using Rules Effectively
* 7: Paul Craig, Professor of Law, University of Oxford: Regulation and
Judicial Review: Perspectives from UK and EC Law
* 8: Mark Freedland, Professor of Law, University of Oxford: Public Law
and Private Finance: Placing the Private Finance Initiative in a
Public Law Frame
* PART 2: REGULATING UTILITIES
* 9: John Swift QC, Rail Regulator, Office of the Rail: Transparency,
Consistency and Predictability as Regulatory Objectives
* 10: Allan Merry, Legal Adviser to the Director General, Office of
Water Services: Transparency, Confidentiality and Freedom of
Information
* 11: Gillian Holding, Partner, Addleshaw Booth and Co, Leeds:
Transparency: Of Business or Process?
* 12: Derek Ridyard, Director, National Economic Research Associates:
Regulation of Price Discrimination and Predation by Dominant Firms:
Lessons from the Ofgas Valueplus Decision
* 13: Michael Grenfell, Solicitor, Norton Rose, London: Can Competition
Law Supplant Utilities Regulation?
* 14: Margaret Bloom, Director of Competition Policy, Office of Fair
Trading: The Impact of the Competition Bill
* 15: Kevin Coates, DG IV Competition, European Commission: Regulating
the Telecommunications Sector: Substituting Practical Cooperation for
the Risks of Competition
* 16: Christopher McCrudden: Social Policy and Economic Regulators:
Some Issues from the Reform of Utility Regulation
* PART 3: REGULATING BANKING AND FINANCIAL SERVICES
* 17: Richard Lindsey, Director of Division of Marketing Regulation,
Securities and Exchange Commission: Efficient Regulation of the
Securities Market
* 18: Brian Quinn, Bank of England: A Model of Financial Regulation
* 19: David KY Tang and Christopher G Weinstein, Preston, Gates and
Ellis: Electronic Commerce: American and International Proposals for
Legal Structures
* 20: Jane Coakley, Executive Director, Morgan Stanley UK Group: Trends
in Financial Services Influences on the Approach to Regulation
* 21: Tim Polgase, Partner, Norton Rose, London: Globalisation and
Implications for cross-border Regulation
* 22: Howell E Jackson, Professor of Law, Harvard Law School: The
Selective Incorporation of Foreign Legal Systems to Promote Nepal as
an International Financial Services Centre
* 1: Christopher McCrudden, Reader in Law, Oxford University; Fellow,
Lincoln College, Oxford: Regulation and Deregulation: An Introduction
* PART 1: REGULATION AND DEREGULATION: GENERAL ISSUES
* 2: Anthony Ogus, Professor of Law, University of Manchester; Research
Professor, University of Maastricht: Corrective Taxation as a
Regulatory Instrument
* 3: Karen Yeung, Linnells Lecturer in Commercial Law, Oxford
University; Fellow of St Anne's College, Oxford: The Private
Enforcement of Competition Law
* 4: Doreen McBarnet, Oxford Centre for Socio-Legal Studies and
Christopher Whelan, University of Warwick Law School: Challenging the
Regulators: Strategies for Resisting Control
* 5: Anne Davies, Fellow, All Souls College, Oxford: Using Contracts to
Enforce Standards: The Case of Waiting Times in the NHS
* 6: Julia Black, Law Department, LSE: Using Rules Effectively
* 7: Paul Craig, Professor of Law, University of Oxford: Regulation and
Judicial Review: Perspectives from UK and EC Law
* 8: Mark Freedland, Professor of Law, University of Oxford: Public Law
and Private Finance: Placing the Private Finance Initiative in a
Public Law Frame
* PART 2: REGULATING UTILITIES
* 9: John Swift QC, Rail Regulator, Office of the Rail: Transparency,
Consistency and Predictability as Regulatory Objectives
* 10: Allan Merry, Legal Adviser to the Director General, Office of
Water Services: Transparency, Confidentiality and Freedom of
Information
* 11: Gillian Holding, Partner, Addleshaw Booth and Co, Leeds:
Transparency: Of Business or Process?
* 12: Derek Ridyard, Director, National Economic Research Associates:
Regulation of Price Discrimination and Predation by Dominant Firms:
Lessons from the Ofgas Valueplus Decision
* 13: Michael Grenfell, Solicitor, Norton Rose, London: Can Competition
Law Supplant Utilities Regulation?
* 14: Margaret Bloom, Director of Competition Policy, Office of Fair
Trading: The Impact of the Competition Bill
* 15: Kevin Coates, DG IV Competition, European Commission: Regulating
the Telecommunications Sector: Substituting Practical Cooperation for
the Risks of Competition
* 16: Christopher McCrudden: Social Policy and Economic Regulators:
Some Issues from the Reform of Utility Regulation
* PART 3: REGULATING BANKING AND FINANCIAL SERVICES
* 17: Richard Lindsey, Director of Division of Marketing Regulation,
Securities and Exchange Commission: Efficient Regulation of the
Securities Market
* 18: Brian Quinn, Bank of England: A Model of Financial Regulation
* 19: David KY Tang and Christopher G Weinstein, Preston, Gates and
Ellis: Electronic Commerce: American and International Proposals for
Legal Structures
* 20: Jane Coakley, Executive Director, Morgan Stanley UK Group: Trends
in Financial Services Influences on the Approach to Regulation
* 21: Tim Polgase, Partner, Norton Rose, London: Globalisation and
Implications for cross-border Regulation
* 22: Howell E Jackson, Professor of Law, Harvard Law School: The
Selective Incorporation of Foreign Legal Systems to Promote Nepal as
an International Financial Services Centre
Lincoln College, Oxford: Regulation and Deregulation: An Introduction
* PART 1: REGULATION AND DEREGULATION: GENERAL ISSUES
* 2: Anthony Ogus, Professor of Law, University of Manchester; Research
Professor, University of Maastricht: Corrective Taxation as a
Regulatory Instrument
* 3: Karen Yeung, Linnells Lecturer in Commercial Law, Oxford
University; Fellow of St Anne's College, Oxford: The Private
Enforcement of Competition Law
* 4: Doreen McBarnet, Oxford Centre for Socio-Legal Studies and
Christopher Whelan, University of Warwick Law School: Challenging the
Regulators: Strategies for Resisting Control
* 5: Anne Davies, Fellow, All Souls College, Oxford: Using Contracts to
Enforce Standards: The Case of Waiting Times in the NHS
* 6: Julia Black, Law Department, LSE: Using Rules Effectively
* 7: Paul Craig, Professor of Law, University of Oxford: Regulation and
Judicial Review: Perspectives from UK and EC Law
* 8: Mark Freedland, Professor of Law, University of Oxford: Public Law
and Private Finance: Placing the Private Finance Initiative in a
Public Law Frame
* PART 2: REGULATING UTILITIES
* 9: John Swift QC, Rail Regulator, Office of the Rail: Transparency,
Consistency and Predictability as Regulatory Objectives
* 10: Allan Merry, Legal Adviser to the Director General, Office of
Water Services: Transparency, Confidentiality and Freedom of
Information
* 11: Gillian Holding, Partner, Addleshaw Booth and Co, Leeds:
Transparency: Of Business or Process?
* 12: Derek Ridyard, Director, National Economic Research Associates:
Regulation of Price Discrimination and Predation by Dominant Firms:
Lessons from the Ofgas Valueplus Decision
* 13: Michael Grenfell, Solicitor, Norton Rose, London: Can Competition
Law Supplant Utilities Regulation?
* 14: Margaret Bloom, Director of Competition Policy, Office of Fair
Trading: The Impact of the Competition Bill
* 15: Kevin Coates, DG IV Competition, European Commission: Regulating
the Telecommunications Sector: Substituting Practical Cooperation for
the Risks of Competition
* 16: Christopher McCrudden: Social Policy and Economic Regulators:
Some Issues from the Reform of Utility Regulation
* PART 3: REGULATING BANKING AND FINANCIAL SERVICES
* 17: Richard Lindsey, Director of Division of Marketing Regulation,
Securities and Exchange Commission: Efficient Regulation of the
Securities Market
* 18: Brian Quinn, Bank of England: A Model of Financial Regulation
* 19: David KY Tang and Christopher G Weinstein, Preston, Gates and
Ellis: Electronic Commerce: American and International Proposals for
Legal Structures
* 20: Jane Coakley, Executive Director, Morgan Stanley UK Group: Trends
in Financial Services Influences on the Approach to Regulation
* 21: Tim Polgase, Partner, Norton Rose, London: Globalisation and
Implications for cross-border Regulation
* 22: Howell E Jackson, Professor of Law, Harvard Law School: The
Selective Incorporation of Foreign Legal Systems to Promote Nepal as
an International Financial Services Centre