Abstract
Banking Law fully addresses the current landscape of banking law and regulation post the 2008 financial crisis. Coverage is balanced between transactional, regulatory, and private law topics across UK banking law, as well as European and international law. The text aims to cover everything needed for a full understanding. Topics covered include: the banker–customer relationship, payment, regulatory architecture in the UK and the European Union, macroprudential regulation, banking culture, governance, incentives, crisis management and resolution, and combatting financial crime.
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Contents
- Front Matter
- 1. Introduction to banking law and regulation
- 2. The banker–customer relationship
- 3. Payment methods
- 4. Banks and finance
- 5. International banking supervision and regulatory architecture
- 6. UK banking supervision and regulatory architecture
- 7. European banking supervision and regulatory architecture
- 8. Micro-prudential regulation I: Capital adequacy
- 9. Micro-prudential regulation II: Other measures
- 10. Structural regulation
- 11. The regulatory framework for bank culture and conduct
- 12. Regulating the governance, structures, and incentives at banks
- 13. Crisis management and resolution
- 14. Combatting financial crime
- End Matter