HOME | A to Z Directory | Events | Maps & Directions | InsidePacific 
Admission to PacificMajors and ProgramsStudent LifeGeneral InformationAdministration

Local to Global: Rethinking Spheres of Authority after a World Financial Crisis

October 16 - 17, 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.


October 16 - 17, 2009

Friday, 8am - 5pm
Saturday, 9am - 12:30pm

S4/S5, Northwest Hall

Pacific McGeorge

The current financial crisis and resultant economic recession raise issues of immediate importance and profound long-range significance with respect to the regulation of financial markets and institutions and with respect to fiscal and monetary policies. The goal of this conference is to focus less on the question of what substantive regulations or other economic policies are needed, and instead look at the question of who will do the regulating or carry out the economic policies in a world in which there are multiple layers of governments.

Some of the questions that the conference will explore include:

  • Should there be a supranational regulator of financial markets and institutions?
  • Are sub-national units of government (example, the state courts of Delaware) the appropriate regulators for institutions with significant worldwide economic impact?
  • Does the lack of a strong central government in the European Union prevent the European Union from taking a sufficiently robust response to the crisis, as, for example, in the event of sovereign defaults in Eastern Europe?
  • Who regulates units of government when they act as participants in financial markets?


MCLE CREDIT available.

 

For more information: go.mcgeorge.edu/localtoglobal

 


Print this PageEmail this Page