Book contents
- Convergence and Divergence of Private Law in Asia
- Convergence and Divergence of Private Law in Asia
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Tables
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Uniform Law and the Production and Circulation of Legal Models
- 3 Convergence, Divergence and Diversity in Financial Law: The Experience of the UNCITRAL Model Law and Cross-Border Insolvency
- 4 The New York Convention and the UNCITRAL Model Law on International Commercial Arbitration: Existing Models for Legal Convergence in Asia?
- 5 Convergences and Divergences: Comparing Contractual and Organizational Models in International Regulatory Cooperation
- 6 Law as a Market Standard: Voluntary Unification in Contract and Company Law
- 7 Is the Harmonisation of Asian Contract Law Possible? The Example of the European Union
- 8 The Presumption of Regularity in Chinese Corporate Contracting: Evidence and the Prospect of Regional Convergence
- 9 Mind the Gap: Studying the Implementation Discrepancy for the ASEAN Economic Community
- 10 The Rule of Law as Key to the ASEAN Legal Order: How Can It Be Ensured?
- 11 How Asian Should Asian Law Be?
- Index
3 - Convergence, Divergence and Diversity in Financial Law: The Experience of the UNCITRAL Model Law and Cross-Border Insolvency
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 February 2022
- Convergence and Divergence of Private Law in Asia
- Convergence and Divergence of Private Law in Asia
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Tables
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Uniform Law and the Production and Circulation of Legal Models
- 3 Convergence, Divergence and Diversity in Financial Law: The Experience of the UNCITRAL Model Law and Cross-Border Insolvency
- 4 The New York Convention and the UNCITRAL Model Law on International Commercial Arbitration: Existing Models for Legal Convergence in Asia?
- 5 Convergences and Divergences: Comparing Contractual and Organizational Models in International Regulatory Cooperation
- 6 Law as a Market Standard: Voluntary Unification in Contract and Company Law
- 7 Is the Harmonisation of Asian Contract Law Possible? The Example of the European Union
- 8 The Presumption of Regularity in Chinese Corporate Contracting: Evidence and the Prospect of Regional Convergence
- 9 Mind the Gap: Studying the Implementation Discrepancy for the ASEAN Economic Community
- 10 The Rule of Law as Key to the ASEAN Legal Order: How Can It Be Ensured?
- 11 How Asian Should Asian Law Be?
- Index
Summary
Godwin’s chapter considers the experience to date of convergence in the area of financial law and, specifically, the UNCITRAL Model Law on Cross-Border Insolvency (‘Model Law’). In particular, the chapter examines the factors that prevent convergence in the area of financial law or, to put it differently, the factors behind divergence. It is suggested that through an examination of these factors, it is possible to assess the practicalities – and the relative merits - of convergence. Such an examination also offers insights into the appropriateness of mechanisms that might be used to achieve convergence and the extent to which the mechanisms need to be tailored to the particular circumstances or legal terrain. The experience of the Model Law shows that full convergence in law (in terms of absolute uniformity) is neither realistic nor practicable and that there is a need to accept a degree of divergence in law between jurisdictions. It also suggests that divergence in law is not a negative as it often leads to convergence in outcomes. Further, divergence – or diversity - is positive if it achieves convergence in outcomes that could not otherwise be achieved as a result of fundamental differences between national legal systems.
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- Information
- Convergence and Divergence of Private Law in Asia , pp. 33 - 61Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022