The distinction between specific concrete rules and general abstract principles has engaged legal theorists for decades. This rules–principles distinction has also become increasingly important in corporate and securities law, as well as financial market regulation. This Article adds two important variables to the rules–principles debate: timing and source. Although these two variables are relevant to legal theory generally, the specific goal here is not to address and engage the rules versus principles literature directly. Rather, the goal here is to ask whether the debate about financial market regulation might benefit from a more transparent analysis of temporal and legal source variables. This Article does not seek to comprehensively an...
This Article corrects widespread misconception about whether complex regulatory systems can be fairl...
This paper examines the various theoretical issues in regulation with a view to enhancing understa...
Securities regulation wears two hats. Its “upstream” side governs firms in connection with their obt...
The distinction between specific concrete rules and general abstract principles has engaged legal th...
Financial regulation poses special challenges because markets a constructed in the sense that they r...
How intensively should financial markets be regulated? Given the talk of regulatory convergence in f...
The author examines the regulatory failures leading up to the financial crisis, the rise of “flexibl...
The time is long past when either economist or lawyers, on the basis of their own singular disciplin...
Should the securities regulation of Ontario venture issuers be based primarily on rules or principle...
Regulation is often casually conceived of as functioning like a binary on/off switch: as if an area,...
Timing is an important consideration in regulatory design. Corrective taxes are usually imposed befo...
Although the securities industry is primarily regulated by specific rules, it is also governed by ge...
We study the relative strengths and weaknesses of principles based and rules based systems of regula...
The financial crisis of 2007-9 revealed serious failings in the regulation of financial institutions...
This Article argues that there is a fundamental mismatch between the nature of finance and current a...
This Article corrects widespread misconception about whether complex regulatory systems can be fairl...
This paper examines the various theoretical issues in regulation with a view to enhancing understa...
Securities regulation wears two hats. Its “upstream” side governs firms in connection with their obt...
The distinction between specific concrete rules and general abstract principles has engaged legal th...
Financial regulation poses special challenges because markets a constructed in the sense that they r...
How intensively should financial markets be regulated? Given the talk of regulatory convergence in f...
The author examines the regulatory failures leading up to the financial crisis, the rise of “flexibl...
The time is long past when either economist or lawyers, on the basis of their own singular disciplin...
Should the securities regulation of Ontario venture issuers be based primarily on rules or principle...
Regulation is often casually conceived of as functioning like a binary on/off switch: as if an area,...
Timing is an important consideration in regulatory design. Corrective taxes are usually imposed befo...
Although the securities industry is primarily regulated by specific rules, it is also governed by ge...
We study the relative strengths and weaknesses of principles based and rules based systems of regula...
The financial crisis of 2007-9 revealed serious failings in the regulation of financial institutions...
This Article argues that there is a fundamental mismatch between the nature of finance and current a...
This Article corrects widespread misconception about whether complex regulatory systems can be fairl...
This paper examines the various theoretical issues in regulation with a view to enhancing understa...
Securities regulation wears two hats. Its “upstream” side governs firms in connection with their obt...