Cyberlaw for Global E-business: Finance, Payments and Dispute Resolution

Cyberlaw for Global E-business: Finance, Payments and Dispute Resolution

Release Date: December, 2007|Copyright: © 2008 |Pages: 318
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-59904-828-4
ISBN13: 9781599048284|ISBN10: 1599048280|EISBN13: 9781599048307
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Description & Coverage
Description:

As the various types of global e-business grow rapidly, the need to establish adequate cyberlaws is increased. Reformation of domestic and global laws has been underway; however, the nature of e-business is one of constant technological developments, consistently outdating existing laws.

Cyberlaw for Global E-Business: Finance, Payment & Dispute Resolution examines cyberlaw discussions worldwide on topics such as cybercrime and risk management, comparative electronic trading systems of securities, digital currency regulation, jurisdiction and consumer protection in cross-border markets, and case law on international bank transfers. An invaluable resource for policy-makers, business experts, lawyers, scholars, and researchers, this book provides comprehensive research from a global perspective on the legal, technical, and financial implications of e-business.

Coverage:

The many academic areas covered in this publication include, but are not limited to:

  • Commodity-based digital currency
  • Consumer protection in e-commerce markets
  • Cross-border jurisdiction
  • Cyber contract
  • Cyber Risk Management
  • Cybercrime and cybersecurity
  • Dispute Resolution
  • Electronic Money
  • Global trends in payment systems
  • Holding and transfer of interests
  • IT development in finance
  • Laws and regulations in e-commerce
  • Mistakes in remittance to account
  • Online business for small to medium enterprises
  • Proprietary trading system
  • Regulation of electronic fund transfers
  • Separation of banking and commerce
  • Technical and legal concerns about global card payments
Reviews & Statements

This book offers an unprecedented in-depth analysis of cyberlaw issues arising in e-business, resulting in a unique collection of academic yet practical papers.

– Takashi Kubota, Waseda University, Japan

Bringing together contributions from lawyers, scholars, and policy-makers from Japan, the US, the UK, India, Malaysia, and elsewhere, Kubota presents 15 chapters examining issues arising out of the conduct of e-business from an international perspective as national laws are thought to be inadequate and under-developed.

– Book News Inc. (2008)

This book is a collection of papers of in-depth analysis on the latest legal and business issues by cyberlaw and business experts from Japan, the United States and the United Kingdom, and Asia nations. It was easy for an economist such as myself to understand, and also very interesting and thought-provoking in considering future IT policies.

– Yutaka Kurihara, Dean/Professor, Department of Economics, Aichi Univeristy, Japan
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Editor/Author Biographies
Takashi Kubota was educated at the University of Tokyo, obtaining a bachelor’s degree (1990) and a master’s degree (1993), earned a master’s degree (1996) at Harvard University, and at Osaka University, obtaining a PhD (2002). He worked for the Bank of Japan from 1990 to 1998 as a legal expert, taught international business law at Nagoya National University from 1998 to 2004 as an associate professor, and is currently a professor of law at Waseda Law School, Waseda University, Japan, where he teaches international financial law, IT law, and so forth. His recent studies include payment, electronic commerce and international financial systems, funds and securities payment laws, cybermalls and online auctions, and the Basel 2.
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