DSpace Collection:
http://hdl.handle.net/10722/57801
2024-03-29T02:00:48ZThe Emergence of Financial Data Governance and the Challenge of Financial Data Sovereignty
http://hdl.handle.net/10722/340638
Title: The Emergence of Financial Data Governance and the Challenge of Financial Data Sovereignty
Authors: Castellano, Giuliano Giovanni Francesco; SELGA, Eriks Kristians; Arner, Douglas Wayne
Abstract: <p>This chapter seeks to address the challenges of datafication of finance and financial data sovereignty. Section II considers the datafication of finance. Section III considers the intersection of data, finance, and data governance, highlighting emerging general data governance styles. Section IV highlights the intersection of financial data regulation and personal data regulation, in the context of the evolution of a range of Open Banking strategies, focusing on personal financial data. Section V presents four emerging financial data governance strategies, exemplified by the United States, EU, China, and India, seeking to bring together finance and its regulation with their evolving domestic data governance regimes. Section VI elaborates how the result of differences in these strategies combined with prudential objectives are converging toward territorialization via data localization. Section VII addresses this growing challenge of fragmentation by outlining how the well-developed transnational regulatory frameworks in finance offer an opportunity to develop technological solutions and approaches that may in fact support both the objectives of financial and data regulation.</p><p><br></p>2023-12-15T00:00:00ZUNIDROIT Access to Credit Instruments
http://hdl.handle.net/10722/340596
Title: UNIDROIT Access to Credit Instruments
Authors: Castellano, Giuliano Giovanni Francesco; Dubovec, Marek2024-04-30T00:00:00ZThe Return of High Policing in Hong Kong
http://hdl.handle.net/10722/340565
Title: The Return of High Policing in Hong Kong
Authors: Fu, Hualing; Zhai, Xiaobo2022-07-01T00:00:00ZFlexibility and Authority: Keys for Informal Justice to Succeed
http://hdl.handle.net/10722/340566
Title: Flexibility and Authority: Keys for Informal Justice to Succeed
Authors: He, X; Su, Y
Abstract: Existing literature regards flexibility and authority as key characteristics of informal justice. We further contend that the combination of the two is crucial for informal justice to be effective. We investigate the process of dispute resolution by a Chinese labour agency. Following the life cycles of a sample of 810 labour disputes, we find that this informal justice forum was efficient and effective, made possible by the combination of flexibility and authority. Flexibility means that the agency attracts certain types of cases that are usually screened out of the formal legal system and that agency officials use “informal,” hence flexible, techniques. Authority means that the administrative agency possesses additional powers over the disputants, and hence the disputants are under pressure to follow its suggestions and decisions. A comparative analysis of various cases of informal justice reinforces the importance of combining flexibility and authority. We further demonstrate that flexibility without authority is insufficient and that some informal justice forums are effective because they enjoy both.2023-01-01T00:00:00Z