Fr. 136.00

Law of International Financial Institutions

English · Hardback

Shipping usually within 3 to 5 weeks

Description

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In this new volume in the Elements series, Daniel D. Bradlow explores international development finance institutions, including the IMF, World Bank, and regional development banks, and provides a detailed overview of the legal frameworks within which these institutions operate, their origins, and the rights and obligations of their member states.


List of contents










  • Introduction

  • 1: International Finance and International Law Before Bretton Woods

  • 2: Bretton Woods and the Creation of the International Monetary Fund and the "World Bank"

  • 3: The Articles of Agreement of the International Financial Institutions

  • 4: The Status of International Financial Institutions under International Law

  • 5: The Evolution of the World Bank

  • 6: The Evolution of the International Monetary Fund

  • 7: The Other IFIs

  • 8: The Challenges Facing the IFIs



About the author

Daniel D. Bradlow is Professor and Senior Fellow at the Centre for Advancement of Scholarship, University of Pretoria, Emeritus Professor of Law at the American University Washington College of Law, and a Compliance Officer in the Social and Environmental Compliance Unit, United Nations Development Program. Previously, he was Professor of Law, Director of the International Legal Studies Program, and Director of the SJD Program at the American University Washington College of Law. He also served as Head of the International Economic Relations and Policy Department for the South African Reserve Bank, and as Chair of the Independent Review Mechanism for the African Development Bank. Daniel D. Bradlow is the author of numerous publications on the international legal issues applicable to international financial institutions and on international development finance and human rights.

Summary

In this new volume in the Elements series, Daniel D. Bradlow traces the history and development of international law and international financial institutions from 1918 to today, providing a detailed overview of the legal frameworks within which such institutions were established and operate, and which structure their relationships with their member states and their citizens.

The book opens with the inter-war years, the Bretton Woods Conference, and background on the treaties establishing the IMF and the World Bank. It then discusses the Articles of Agreement of the IMF and the IBRD, providing information on their governance arrangements, mandates, and operating principles. The international legal status of these two international financial institutions, their international legal rights, responsibilities and obligations, and their privileges and immunities are also examined. In later chapters, the book explores how the structure, functions, and operations of the World Bank and IMF have evolved since their establishment and examines the regional development banks and the regional financial arrangements that were created after them. The book concludes by exploring the challenges that international financial institutions are currently facing, and the contributions that international law can make to help them successfully meet these challenges.

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