OAR@UM Community:
/library/oar/handle/123456789/46139
2026-06-12T07:47:31ZFinancial services privatisation : two case studies
/library/oar/handle/123456789/46682
Title: Financial services privatisation : two case studies
Abstract: How Romania’s, and Estonia’s, financial services sectors
moved towards, and through, their respective privatisation processes
provides sharply contrasting scenarios. For a long time Romania’s
following up of a promise made to the International Monetary Fund
was simply an unimpressive record of dithering. By contrast, Estonia’s
performance was a generally positive account, one which was based on
norms and structures which were often comparable to those in advanced
industrial countries. This paper examines in detail these two national
experiences.
Description: This document contains the Table of Contents, and Preface by Professor Dr. Stephen C. Calleya, Director MEDAC.2018-08-01T00:00:00ZThe teaching of financial services regulation : a contextual view
/library/oar/handle/123456789/46680
Title: The teaching of financial services regulation : a contextual view
Abstract: This paper discusses issues and developments that relate to the
teaching of bank regulation in tertiary institutions. It considers how course
content, teaching texts, and methodology, can become subject to issues like
specific, historical, and jurisdictional, cultures and contexts for the discipline.
It considers how economic and political approaches impact such teaching.
How banking regulations tools are used, and course structures are built, are
matters which impinge on the type of trained personnel who later eventually
leave academia and end up working on regulatory or compliance matters.2018-08-01T00:00:00ZThe two sides of the Mediterranean : a discussion
/library/oar/handle/123456789/46679
Title: The two sides of the Mediterranean : a discussion
Abstract: This paper is a discussion of policy lock-in and lock-out in terms of
how these exist and operate in the economic and political spheres of several
of the Northern and Southern littoral countries of the Mediterranean. It
describes the informal strategic bind that the EU finds itself in as it often
ends up facing problems of others which are shunted on to it. Policy lock-in
often includes a wide range of inter-related areas, as well as several forms of
bias that impinge on both political and economic institutions. The paper also
discusses the type of society that may be needed to handle policy lock-in, and
this is considered in terms of social democratic liberalism and the necessity of
a constantly learning society.
Description: Notes about the author follow this article.2018-08-01T00:00:00ZThe better regulation/governance nexus : a discussion
/library/oar/handle/123456789/46670
Title: The better regulation/governance nexus : a discussion
Abstract: This paper proposes a reviewing discussion of the linkages between
the concepts of better regulation and organisational governance. Both are
considered in a context of the former having become an attempt (some would
posit it as an exclusively EU—inspired one) to transcend many of the negative
attributes of all other regulatory paradigms. After initially considering the
general contextual ambient for all regulation, we then discuss the issue of
to what extent should the state regulate, some aspects of the macroeconomic
impact, and the regulatory components analysis which builds a causal chain
in governance processes. We also consider some corporates’ behaviour in the
general area of the regulation/governance nexus.2018-08-01T00:00:00Z