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Equivalence and Substituted Compliance in Financial Markets Law provides in-depth analysis of deference in the EU, Switzerland, and the US legal frameworks. It examines equivalence mechanisms in these jurisdictions from a comparative, economic, and constitutional perspective, discussing questions of national law, EU law, and world trade law.
List of contents
- 1: Access to EU Financial Markets - Equivalence as a New Approach
- 2: Equivalence in the EU - Key Requirements, Equivalence Decision, and Legal Consequences
- 3: A Liberal Access to Financial Markets in Switzerland - Equivalence and Appropriateness
- 4: The Approach of Substituted Compliance in the United States
- 5: The Future of Deference in the World and Equivalence in the EU
About the author
Dr Jonas Schürger holds a PhD from the University of Bonn for his work on the principles of equivalence and substituted compliance. He is currently a legal trainee at the Higher Regional Court of Cologne and worked, inter alia, for the German Ministry of Finance. Dr Schürger previously worked as a Research Assistant at the Universities of Vienna and Bonn. His research focuses on EU law, public international law and banking and capital markets law, topics on which he also published extensively in the past. Furthermore, he was a member of the Young Researchers Group of the European Banking Institute and coordinated the group until July 2022.
Summary
Equivalence and Substituted Compliance in Financial Markets Law provides in-depth analysis of deference in the EU, Switzerland, and the US legal frameworks. It examines equivalence mechanisms in these jurisdictions from a comparative, economic, and constitutional perspective, discussing questions of national law, EU law, and world trade law.