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The Financialisation of the Citizen : Social and Financial Inclusion Through European Private Law.

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: Hart Studies in Commercial and Financial Law SeriesPublisher: London : Bloomsbury Publishing Plc, 2018Copyright date: ©2018Edition: 1st edDescription: 1 online resource (229 pages)Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9781509919239
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: The Financialisation of the CitizenDDC classification:
  • 340.115094
LOC classification:
  • KJE995 .C667 2018
Online resources:
Contents:
Intro -- Acknowledgements -- Contents -- Introduction -- I. The Scenario -- II. Inclusion, Finance and Private Law -- III. Methodology -- IV. Structure -- 1. The Idea of Financial and Social Inclusion -- I. Dimensions of Financial and Social Inclusion -- II. The Rise of Social Inclusion and Its Merging with Financial Inclusion -- III. The Transformations of State and Law -- IV. Financialisation -- V. Privatised Keynesianism and Democratisation of Finance -- VI. The Role of Trust -- VII. Passing the Risk -- VIII. The Other Side of the Coin -- IX. Re-regulation? -- 2. Financial and Social Inclusion in the European Legal Order -- I. An EU Affair -- II. Distinguishing the Forms of Inclusion in Europe -- III. A Just or an Inclusive Private Law? -- IV. The Rise of Inclusion in European Law -- V. In European Contract Law -- 3. Access to a Bank Account -- I. A Gateway to the Market -- II. Legal Frameworks in Europe -- III. The Problems of Overdrafts -- IV. EU Involvement -- V. The Recommendation -- VI. The Problem of Reasonable Costs -- VII. The New Directive -- 4. Access to Credit -- I. From a Right to a Bank Account to a Right to Credit? -- II. Responsible Lending and the Problem of Self-Interest -- III. Responsible Lending and European Contract Law -- IV. Access to Information -- V. Post-Crisis Responses and the Mortgage Credit Directive -- VI. The Public-Private Problem -- VII. Financial Stability and Exclusion -- VIII. Back to Trust -- 5. Over-Indebtedness -- I. How Much is too Much? -- II. Legal Responses -- III. Causes of Over-Indebtedness and their Legal Appreciation -- IV. A Categorisation of Private Law Responses to Over-Indebtedness -- V. European Over-Indebtedness Law -- 6. Financial Education -- I. Just Gonna have to be a Different Man -- II. The Rise of the Policy of Financial Education.
III. Critical Aspects of the Policy of Financial Education -- IV. Interference with Contract Law -- Conclusion -- Bibliography -- European Institutions -- International Institutions -- National Authorities and Central Banks -- Index.
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Intro -- Acknowledgements -- Contents -- Introduction -- I. The Scenario -- II. Inclusion, Finance and Private Law -- III. Methodology -- IV. Structure -- 1. The Idea of Financial and Social Inclusion -- I. Dimensions of Financial and Social Inclusion -- II. The Rise of Social Inclusion and Its Merging with Financial Inclusion -- III. The Transformations of State and Law -- IV. Financialisation -- V. Privatised Keynesianism and Democratisation of Finance -- VI. The Role of Trust -- VII. Passing the Risk -- VIII. The Other Side of the Coin -- IX. Re-regulation? -- 2. Financial and Social Inclusion in the European Legal Order -- I. An EU Affair -- II. Distinguishing the Forms of Inclusion in Europe -- III. A Just or an Inclusive Private Law? -- IV. The Rise of Inclusion in European Law -- V. In European Contract Law -- 3. Access to a Bank Account -- I. A Gateway to the Market -- II. Legal Frameworks in Europe -- III. The Problems of Overdrafts -- IV. EU Involvement -- V. The Recommendation -- VI. The Problem of Reasonable Costs -- VII. The New Directive -- 4. Access to Credit -- I. From a Right to a Bank Account to a Right to Credit? -- II. Responsible Lending and the Problem of Self-Interest -- III. Responsible Lending and European Contract Law -- IV. Access to Information -- V. Post-Crisis Responses and the Mortgage Credit Directive -- VI. The Public-Private Problem -- VII. Financial Stability and Exclusion -- VIII. Back to Trust -- 5. Over-Indebtedness -- I. How Much is too Much? -- II. Legal Responses -- III. Causes of Over-Indebtedness and their Legal Appreciation -- IV. A Categorisation of Private Law Responses to Over-Indebtedness -- V. European Over-Indebtedness Law -- 6. Financial Education -- I. Just Gonna have to be a Different Man -- II. The Rise of the Policy of Financial Education.

III. Critical Aspects of the Policy of Financial Education -- IV. Interference with Contract Law -- Conclusion -- Bibliography -- European Institutions -- International Institutions -- National Authorities and Central Banks -- Index.

Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.

Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2024. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.

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