Overview
Effective regulation, including in areas such as competition law, securities, financial services, anti-money laundering and taxation, requires the availability and use of various dispute resolution and enforcement techniques. This course reviews the therories, forms and techniques of regulation with a view to examining how they interact with methods of enforcement … For more content click the Read More button below.
The course examines the major policy questions in “white-collar crime” and regulatory enforcement, such as deterrence or compliance, achieving behavioural change, the role of reputation, action against corporation or individuals, and the interaction between public and private enforcement (class actions).
The course uses multi-media case studies from Australia and the United States, such as disclosure breaches, insider trading, Ponzi schemes and anti-money laundering, to examine and critique the regulatory responses chosen. Students will examine the objectives and choices made by regulators and the responses of defendants and their lawyers, with a view to considering the effectiveness of both.
The course combines theory and practice with a view to equipping students for careers with either regulators or in private practice.
Conditions for Enrolment
Prerequisite: Completion of 78 UOC in LAWS courses including Resolving Civil Disputes (LAWS2371).
Course Attributes
Offered irregularly or alternate years
Delivery
In-person - Intensive
Fees
Type | Amount |
---|---|
Commonwealth Supported Students (if applicable) | $2124 |
Domestic Students | $6720 |
International Students | $6720 |
Pre-2019 Handbook Editions
Access past handbook editions (2018 and prior)