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Public And Private Enforcement Of Securities Laws The Regulator And The Class Action In Australias Continuous Disclosure Regime Michael Legg

  • SKU: BELL-50226706
Public And Private Enforcement Of Securities Laws The Regulator And The Class Action In Australias Continuous Disclosure Regime Michael Legg
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Public And Private Enforcement Of Securities Laws The Regulator And The Class Action In Australias Continuous Disclosure Regime Michael Legg instant download after payment.

Publisher: Hart Publishing
File Extension: PDF
File size: 3.62 MB
Author: Michael Legg
ISBN: 9781509941513, 9781509941544, 1509941517, 1509941541
Language: English
Year: 2022

Product desciption

Public And Private Enforcement Of Securities Laws The Regulator And The Class Action In Australias Continuous Disclosure Regime Michael Legg by Michael Legg 9781509941513, 9781509941544, 1509941517, 1509941541 instant download after payment.

This book undertakes unique case studies – including interviews with participants and empirical analysis – of public and private enforcement of Australian securities laws addressing continuous disclosure.
Enforcement of laws is crucial to effective regulation. Historically, enforcement was the province of a government regulator with significant discretion (public enforcement). However, more and more citizens are being expected to take action themselves (private enforcement). Consistent with regulatory pluralism, public and private enforcement exist in parallel, with the capacity to both help and hinder each other, and the achievement of the goals of enforcement in a range of areas of regulation. The rise of the shareholder class action in Australia, backed by litigation funding or lawyers, has given rise to enforcement overlapping with that of the government regulator, the Australian Securities and Investments Commission. The ramifications of overlapping enforcement are explained based on detailed analysis. The analysis is further bolstered by the regulator’s approach to enforcement changing from a compliance orientation to a ‘Why not litigate?’ approach.
The analysis and ramifications of the Australian case studies involve matters of regulatory theory and practice that apply across jurisdictions. The book will appeal to practitioners, regulators and academics interested in regulatory policy and enforcement, and the operation of regulators and class actions, including their interaction.
Volume 12 in the series Civil Justice Systems

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