Transnational Financial Regulation after the Crisis
The global financial crisis that began in 2007 was the most destructive since the 1930s. The rapid spread of the crisis across borders and the complexity of these cross-border linkages highlighted the importance for authorities of working together in responding to the crisis.
This book examines the transnational response that relied heavily on a set of relatively informal transnational regulatory groupings that had been constructed over previous decades. During the crisis these arrangements were made stronger and more inclusive, but they remain very complex. Thousands of pages of new rules have been created by various transnational bodies, and the implementation of these rules relies heavily on domestic law and regulation and private rules and practices. This book analyses this complex response, showing that its overly technical and incremental character, the persistence of tensions between transnational processes and state-centred politics, and the ongoing power of private actors, have made the regulatory response fall short of what is needed.
Transnational Financial Regulation after the Crisis provides new insights that are relevant for theory and practice, not only for transnational financial regulation, but for global governance more generally.
Tony Porter is Professor of Political Science at McMaster University in Hamilton, Canada. His most recent book is Transnational Financial Associations and the Governance of Global Finance: Assembling Power and Wealth (Routledge, 2013), co-authored with Heather McKeen-Edwards. His research has focused on institutional changes in transnational governance, with particular emphasis on global finance, and on the role in transnational governance of private standards and technical systems.
RIPE Series in Global Political Economy
Series Editors: Jacqueline Best (University of Ottawa, Canada), Ian Bruff (Manchester University, UK), Paul Langley (Durham University, UK) and Anna Leander (Copenhagen Business School, Denmark).
Formerly edited by Leonard Seabrooke (Copenhagen Business School, Denmark), Randall Germain (Carleton University, Canada), Rorden Wilkinson (University of Manchester, UK), Otto Holman (University of Amsterdam, Netherlands), Marianne Marchand (Universidad de las Amricas-Puebla, Mexico), Henk Overbeek (Free University, Amsterdam, Netherlands) and Marianne Franklin (Goldsmiths, University of London, UK).
The RIPE series editorial board are:
Mathias Albert (Bielefeld University, Germany), Mark Beeson (University of Birmingham, UK), A. Claire Cutler (University of Victoria, Canada), Marianne Franklin (Goldsmiths, University of London, UK), Randall Germain (Carleton University, Canada), Stephen Gill (York University, Canada), Jeffrey Hart (Indiana University, USA), Eric Helleiner (Trent University, Canada), Otto Holman (University of Amsterdam, Netherlands), Marianne H. Marchand (Universidad de las Amricas-Puebla, Mexico), Craig N. Murphy (Wellesley College, USA), Robert OBrien (McMaster University, Canada), Henk Overbeek (Vrije Universiteit, Netherlands), Anthony Payne (University of Sheffield, UK), V. Spike Peterson (University of Arizona, USA) and Rorden Wilkinson (University of Manchester, UK).
This series, published in association with the Review of International Political Economy, provides a forum for current and interdisciplinary debates in international political economy. The series aims to advance understanding of the key issues in the global political economy, and to present innovative analyses of emerging topics. The titles in the series focus on three broad themes:
the structures, processes and actors of contemporary global transformations;
the changing forms taken by governance, at scales from the local and everyday to the global and systemic; and
the inseparability of economic from political, social and cultural questions, including resistance, dissent and social movements.
The series comprises two strands:
The RIPE Series in Global Political Economy aims to address the needs of students and teachers, and the titles will be published in hardback and paperback. Titles include:
Transnational Classes and International Relations
Kees van der Pijl
Gender and Global Restructuring:
Sightings, sites and resistances
Edited by Marianne H. Marchand and Anne Sisson Runyan
Global Political Economy
Contemporary theories
Edited by Ronen Palan
Ideologies of Globalization
Contending visions of a new world order
Mark Rupert
The Clash within Civilisations
Coming to terms with cultural conflicts
Dieter Senghaas
Global Unions?
Theory and strategies of organized labour in the global political economy
Edited by Jeffrey Harrod and Robert OBrien
Political Economy of a Plural World
Critical reflections on power, morals and civilizations
Robert Cox, with Michael Schechter
A Critical Rewriting of Global Political Economy
Integrating reproductive, productive and virtual economies
V. Spike Peterson
Contesting Globalization
Space and place in the world economy
Andr C. Drainville
Global Institutions and Development
Framing the world?
Edited by Morten Bs and Desmond McNeill
Global Institutions, Marginalization, and Development
Craig N. Murphy
Critical Theories, International Relations and the Anti-Globalisation Movement
The politics of global resistance
Edited by Catherine Eschle and Bice Maiguashca
Globalization, Governmentality, and Global Politics
Regulation for the rest of us?
Ronnie D. Lipschutz, with James K. Rowe
Critical Perspectives on Global Governance
Rights and regulation in governing regimes
Jean Grugel and Nicola Piper
Beyond States and Markets
The challenges of social reproduction
Edited by Isabella Bakker and Rachel Silvey
The Industrial Vagina
The political economy of the global sex trade
Sheila Jeffreys
Capital as Power
A study of order and creorder
Jonathan Nitzan and Shimshon Bichler
The Global Political Economy of Intellectual Property Rights,
Second Edition
The new enclosures
Christopher May
Corporate Power and Ownership in Contemporary Capitalism
The politics of resistance and domination
Susanne Soederberg
Savage Economics
Wealth, poverty and the temporal walls of capitalism
David L. Blaney and Naeem Inayatullah
Cultural Political Economy
Edited by Jacqueline Best and Matthew Paterson
Gender and Global Restructuring,
Second Edition
Sightings, sites and resistances
Edited by Marianne H. Marchand and Anne Sisson Runyan
Transnational Financial Associations and the Governance of Global Finance
Assembling wealth and power
Heather McKeen-Edwards and Tony Porter
The Making of Modern Finance
Liberal governance and the gold standard
Samuel Knafo
Routledge/RIPE Studies in Global Political Economy is a forum for innovative new research intended for a high-level specialist readership, and the titles will be available in hardback only. Titles include: