The Oxford Handbook of Institutions of International Economic Governance and Market Regulation
This second part explores the challenges of compliance with those regulations is discussed, highlighting how market discipline and judicial sanctions combine, and establish the “rule of law” at the international level.
Market- Based Enforcement
- Chapter 12 - Beyond Conditionality: How Contracts, Credit Ratings, and Credit Default Swaps Influence State Sovereignty
Bruce G. Carruthers (Northwestern University) and Erin Lockwood (University of California, Irvine)
- Chapter 13 - The Credit Rating Agencies and Their Role in the Financial System
Lawrence J. White (New York University)
Private Enforcement by (Digital) Intermediaries
- Chapter 14 - Algorithmic Governance by Online Intermediaries
Niva Elkin-Koren (Tel Aviv University) and Maayan Perel (University of Haifa)
- Chapter 15 - Digital Platforms and Antitrust
Geoffrey Parker (Dartmouth College), Georgios Petropoulos (MIT), and Marshall Van Alstyne (Boston University)
Judicial Enforcement
- Chapter 16 - Corporate Liability and Its Untidy Boundaries: A Historical Genealogy of Business Accountability under International Criminal Law
Kim Christian Priemel (University of Oslo)
- Chapter 17 - The Political and Professional Economies of US Global Criminal Enforcement
Samuel W. Buell (Duke University)
Economic Interdependences vs. National Sovereignty
- Chapter 18 - Governing Proliferation Finance: Multilateralism, Transgovernmentalism, and Hegemony in the Case of Sanctions Against Iran
- Grégoire Mallard (Geneva Graduate Institute)
- Chapter 19 - Courts, Sovereign Immunity, and Credible Commitment in Sovereign Debt Markets
W. Mark C. Weidemaier (University of North Carolina)
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