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ISBN: HB: 9780226531977

University of Chicago Press

May 2018

288 pp.

22.8x15.2 cm

HB:
£56,00
QTY:

International Bankruptcy

The Challenge of Insolvency in a Global Economy

With the growth of international business and the rise of companies with subsidiaries around the world, the question of where a company should file bankruptcy proceedings has become increasingly complicated. Today, most businesses are likely to have international trading partners, or to operate and hold assets in more than one country. To execute a corporate restructuring or liquidation under several different insolvency regimes at once is an enormous and expensive challenge. With "International Bankruptcy", Jodie Adams Kirshner explores the issues involved in determining which courts should have jurisdiction and which laws should apply in addressing problems within. Kirshner brings together theory with the discussion of specific cases and legal developments to explore this developing area of law. Looking at the key issues that arise in cross-border proceedings, "International Bankruptcy" offers a guide to this legal environment. In addition, she explores how globalization has encouraged the creation of new legal practices that bypass national legal systems, such as the European Insolvency Framework and the Model Law on Cross-Border Insolvency of the United Nations Commission on International Trade Law. The traditional comparative law framework misses the nuances of these dynamics. Ultimately, Kirshner draws both positive and negative lessons about regulatory coordination in the hope of finding cleaner and more productive paths to wind down or rehabilitate failing international companies.

About the Author

Jodie Adams Kirshner is research professor at New York University and a lecturer in international bankruptcy law at Columbia University Law School. She has also served as a technical advisor to the Bank for International Settlements and worked as an independent consultant for financial funds investing in distressed debt. Until 2014, she was a member of the Cambridge University law faculty. She also served as deputy director of the Cambridge LLM program and the Cambridge Centre for Corporate and Commercial Law and as a fellow of Peterhouse College, Cambridge.