Description
This analysis of currents trends in financial regulation offers a roadmap for those countries considering adopting the Twin Peaks model.
About the Author
Andrew Godwin is Associate Professor and Director of Studies for Banking and Finance at Melbourne Law School, the University of Melbourne, Australia. His teaching and research interests include finance and insolvency law, transactional law, financial regulation (particularly disclosure and regulatory systems), property law and the regulation of the legal profession. He has worked closely with governments, financial regulators and international organisations on financial regulation reforms. Andrew Schmulow is Senior lecturer in law at the School of Law, University of Wollongong, Australia. He also holds visiting positions at universities in South Africa and South Korea. He advised South Africa's National Treasury on the drafting of the Conduct of Financial Institutions Act, and the World Bank on designing an indicator framework to measure consumer financial well-being.
Reviews
'This book provides, for the first time, a comprehensive analysis of the 'twin peaks' model of financial regulation across multiple jurisdictions, drawing on insights from academics and regulatory practitioners to explore the important question of how the architecture of financial regulation should be organised in order to best achieve its multiple objectives.' Julia Black, CBE, FBA, author of Rules and Regulators
'Twin Peaks is a division of regulatory responsibilities first substantially implemented in Australia and now proving increasingly popular around the world. This handbook assembles many leading regulatory scholars to analyse its rise and chart its potential future course. I commend this important contribution to all who are interested in how banking and finance might better be regulated.' Ross Buckley, KPMG-KWM Professor of Disruptive Innovation, UNSW Sydney
Book Information
ISBN 9781009295680
Author Andrew Godwin
Format Paperback
Page Count 385
Imprint Cambridge University Press
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Weight(grams) 719g