Cryptocurrencies in public and private law / edited by David Fox and Sarah Green
Material type:
- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 9780198826385
- K4431 CRY
Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Law Library Open Shelf | K4431 CRY (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 160025 | Available | BK148227 | ||
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Law Library Open Shelf | K4431 CRY (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 160026 | Available | BK148197 |
Browsing Law Library shelves, Shelving location: Open Shelf Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
K3990 COO The law of nuclear energy | K3995 LAW The law and policy of biofuels / | K4105 HOD Aviation law and drones : unmanned aircraft and the future of aviation / | K4431 CRY Cryptocurrencies in public and private law / | K4431 CRY Cryptocurrencies in public and private law / | K4460.A58 TAX Tax, inequality, and human rights | K4460 LIV Tax and culture : convergence, divergence, and the future of tax law / |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Cryptocurrencies : the underlying technology / Sarah Green -- It's virtually money / Sarah Green -- Cryptocurrencies in international and public law : conceptions of money / Charles Proctor -- Developing the right regulatory regime for cryptocurrencies and other value data / Corinne Zellweger-Gutknecht -- Cryptocurrencies and the conflict of laws / Andrew Dickinson -- Cryptocurrencies in the common law of property / David Fox -- Cryptocurrencies as property in civilian and mixed legal systems / Daniel Carr -- The characterization of Cryptocurrencies in East Asia / Kelvin F.K. Low and Wu Ying-Chieh -- Cryptocurrencies and banking law : are there lessons to learn? / Christopher Hare -- Taxation of cryptocurrencies / Anne Fairpo -- Non-state community virtual currencies /
This book examines how cryptocurrencies based on blockchain technologies fit into existing general law categories of public and private law. The book takes the common law systems of the United Kingdom as the centre of its study but extends beyond the UK to show how cryptocurrencies would be accommodated in some Western European and East Asian legal systems outside the common law tradition.0By investigating traditional conceptions of money in public law and private law the work examines the difficulties of fitting cryptocurrencies within those approaches and models. Fundamental questions regarding issues of ownership, transfer, conflict of laws, and taxation are addressed with a view to equipping the reader with the tools to answer common transactional questions about cryptocurrencies. The international contributor team uses the common law systems of the United Kingdom as a basis for the analysis, but also looks comparatively to other systems across the wider common law and civil law world to provide detailed examination of the legal problems encountered.
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