From: | Jason W Neyers <jneyers@uwo.ca> |
To: | obligations <obligations@uwo.ca> |
Date: | 18/10/2022 23:21:34 UTC |
Subject: | ODG: Liability of Financial Supervisors and Resolution Authorities |
Dear Colleagues:
Congratulations go out to ODGers Danny Busch, Christos Gortsos, and Gerard McMeel QC on the publication of their edited collection
Liability of Financial Supervisors and Resolution Authorities with OUP.
There will be a book launch on 21 October 2022 to which all ODGers are invited:
https://www.law.ox.ac.uk/content/event/book-launch-liability-financial-supervisors-and-resolution-authorities
From the description:
Since the global financial crisis of 2008, claims by clients, shareholders, depositors, and bondholders of financial
firms have increased against financial supervisors and resolution authorities for inadequate supervision or resolution action. Liability of Financial Supervisors and Resolution Authorities is the first book to offer a thorough and systematic analysis
of the liability regimes which apply to financial supervisors and resolution authorities at the EU level (particularly relevant since the European Banking Union came into operation in 2014), at the level of individual EU Member States, as well as in other
major jurisdictions worldwide.
The jurisdiction-by-jurisdiction approach provides a detailed analysis of the liability regimes as they apply to local financial supervisors and resolution authorities in major civil law, common law, and mixed legal system jurisdictions.
This global view of the primary financial jurisdictions as examples provides a unique and comprehensive overview which is of great practical and theoretical importance.
The work concludes with a comparative law evaluation that discusses to what extent limitations of the liability of
national financial supervisors and resolution authorities are valid under the EU rules on Member State liability. It also explores whether it would be preferable to adopt a uniform liability standard for the European Central Bank (ECB), the Single Resolution
Board (SRB), and national financial supervisors and resolution authorities. Furthermore, it addresses whether it would be preferable to adopt a provision to the effect that the Court of Justice of the European Union has exclusive jurisdiction in relation to
the ECB, SRB, and the national financial supervisors and resolution authorities.
Happy Reading,
Jason Neyers
Professor of Law
Faculty of Law
Western University
Law Building Rm 26
e. jneyers@uwo.ca
t. 519.661.2111 (x88435)
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