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The COVID-19 pandemic and the global response to it has led to a major upheaval of the international banking sector. This book has an international reach and constitutes a blend between theory and international, EU, comparative and national law and practice, with the primary purpose to review the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the architecture and content of international monetary and banking law. Part I is focused on this aspect, considering the response of international financial fora and some major central banks all over the globe to the crisis. A secondary purpose is considered in Parts II and III, offering a thorough overview, analysis, and discussion of two main issues which currently are of a significant importance for, and have heavy impact on, the law governing monetary policy and relations, banking regulation and payment systems law: (i) digitalisation of money and finance and (ii) sustainable finance. Other selected legal aspects relating to central banking, as well as to banking regulation and supervision are finally discussed in Part IV, and in particular central banks' independence and accountability, unconventional monetary policies, comparative aspects of central banking and banking failures, legal aspects of monetary integration, and the legal nature of financial standards. The individual Chapters are written, exclusively, by members of the Committee on International Monetary Law of the International Law Association (MOCOMILA) and reflect the global composition of this Committee of leading experts in international monetary and banking law from international financial institutions, central banks, the academia, the judiciary, and legal practice.
Auteur
Sir William Blair studied law at Oxford University and practised at the English bar specialising in banking and finance. He became a High Court judge in 2008 and Judge in Charge of the Commercial Court in 2017-18. Professor of Financial Law and Ethics at the Centre for Commercial Law Studies, Queen Mary University of London, he is Chair of the Enforcement Decision Making Committee of the Bank of England, an international arbitrator at 3VB Chambers where he helped establish the pro bono International Advisory and Dispute Resolution Unit, and a judge of the Qatar International Court. Chiara Zilioli holds an LL.M. from Harvard Law School and a Ph.D. from the European University Institute. She is the General Counsel of the European Central Bank. She has been appointed Professor at the Law Faculty of the J-W Goethe Universität, Frankfurt am Main, where she lectures regularly. She is also professor at the Law department of the LUISS University, Rome, and at the Collegio Europeo di Parma, Italy. In 2012 she has given a course at the Academy of European Law of the European University Institute. Chiara Zilioli is a member of the Italian Bar, is married and has four children. Christos Gortsos is Professor of Public Economic Law at the Law School of the National and Kapodistrian University (NKUA) of Athens. He studied, at undergraduate and graduate level, law, economics, finance, as well as international history and politics at the NKUA and the Universities of Zurich, Pennsylvania (Wharton Business School) and Geneva (Graduate Institute of International Studies), where he also obtained his PhD degree. Currently, he is, inter alia, Vice-President of the Board of Appeal of the European Supervisory Authorities, President of the Academic Board of the European Banking Institute (EBI), and Member of the European Parliament's Expert Group on banking resolution.