New to this edition
Readership: Practitioners, judges and academics specialising in banking, financial and monetary law (especially in an international context); libraries and institutions in the UK and worldwide.
Charles Proctor, Solicitor of the Supreme Court, England & Wales, and Partner at Nabarro Nathanson
Review(s) from previous edition"`virtually canonical' The Times
"a book described by central bankers as "the Bible" of international monetary law." - The Times online
"`[has] attained an almost biblical authority' Daily Telegraph"
"`an unrivalled standard work' Sir Leonard Hoffmann, Guardian"
"`It may not be out of place to say a few words about the reputation of this work and its learned author. The Legal Aspect of Money must rank as one of the great legal publications in English of the century ... The erudition is staggering and the amount of literature, legislation and case law surveyed is prodigious. As an essay in comparative law on a highly technical topic it can have few rivals.' The Cambridge Law Journal"
"`this book, with its erudite and elegant prose, provides an eloquent memorial to one of the leading English legal scholars of this century ... Dr Mann has strong views which are expressed clearly, often magisterially ... The Legal Aspect of Money remains a monumental work, pre-eminent in its field and a paradigm of the value of comparative legal scholarship. It has much to offer both practitioners and academics.' British Yearbook of International Law"
Part I: The Concept of Money and Monetary Systems 1: The Concept of Money 2: The Organisation of the Monetary System Part II: The Private Law of Monetary Obligations 3: The Character of Monetary Obligation 4: Monetary Obligations and the Conflict of Laws 5: Interpretation of Monetary Obligations - Initial Uncertainty 6: The Interpretation of Monetary Obligations - Subsequent Uncertainty 7: The Performance of Monetary Obligations 8: Legal Proceedings and their Effect upon Monetary Obligations Part III: The Principle of Nominalism 9: Liquidated Sums and the Principle of Nominalism 10: Monetary Obligations: Unliquidated Amounts 11: Excluding the Effects of Nominalism 12: Nominalism, Legislation and Public Policy 13: Nominalism, Private International Law and the Lex Monetae Principle Part IV: Exchange Controls, Exchange Rates and Sanctions 14: Exchange Control - The UK Model 15: Exchange Control Under the International Monetary Fund Agreement 16: The Private International Law of Exchange Control 17: Sanctions 18: Exchange Rates Part V: Public International Law of Money 19: Monetary Sovereignty 20: The Protection of Foreign Currency Systems 21: The Protection of Foreign Monetary Institutions 22: International Rules of Monetary Conduct 23: The Monetary Law of Interstate Obligations Part VI: Monetary Unions and Other Forms of Monetary Organisation 24: The Nature and History of Monetary Unions 25: Historical Background to EMU 26: EMU and the Treaty on European Union 27: The Institutional Framework of Monetary Union 28: The Single Currency and its Treaty Framework 29: The Euro Regulations 30: Monetary Union and Monetary Obligations 31: The Euro and Monetary Sovereignty 32: Withdrawal from the Eurozone 33: Other Forms of Monetary Organisation