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This book undertakes unique case studies, including interviews with
participants, as well as empirical analysis, of public and private
enforcement of Australian securities laws addressing continuous
disclosure. Enforcement of laws is crucial to effective regulation.
Historically, enforcement was the province of a government
regulator with significant discretion (public enforcement).
However, more and more citizens are being expected to take action
themselves (private enforcement). Consistent with regulatory
pluralism, public and private enforcement exist in parallel, with
the capacity to both help and hinder each other, and the
achievement of the goals of enforcement in a range of areas of
regulation. The rise of the shareholder class action in Australia,
backed by litigation funding or lawyers, has given rise to
enforcement overlapping with that of the government regulator, the
Australian Securities and Investments Commission. The ramifications
of overlapping enforcement are explained based on detailed
analysis. The analysis is further bolstered by the regulator's
approach to enforcement changing from a compliance orientation to a
"Why not litigate?" approach. The analysis and ramifications of the
Australian case studies involve matters of regulatory theory and
practice that apply across jurisdictions. The book will appeal to
practitioners, regulators and academics interested in regulatory
policy and enforcement, and the operation of regulators and class
actions, including their interaction.
How are new technologies changing the practice of law? With
examples and explanations drawn from the UK, US, Canada, Australia
and other common law countries, as well as from China and Europe,
this book considers the opportunities and implications for lawyers
as artificial intelligence systems become commonplace in legal
service delivery. It examines what lawyers do in the practice of
law and where AI will impact this work. It also explains the
important continuing role of the lawyer in an AI world. This book
is divided into three parts: Part A provides an accessible
explanation of AI, including diagrams, and contrasts this with the
role and work of lawyers. Part B focuses on six different aspects
of legal work (litigation, transactional, dispute resolution,
regulation and compliance, criminal law and legal advice and
strategy) where AI is making a considerable impact and looks at how
this is occurring. Part C discusses how lawyers and law firms can
best utilise the promise of AI, while also acknowledging its
limitations. It also discusses ethical and regulatory issues,
including the lawyer's role in upholding the rule of law.
The legal profession has undergone significant changes in the past
few years. These have affected working structures and context
within the profession, in turn affecting the wellbeing of
individual practitioners. This book is the first to consider how
these operate in practice and how they impact on the wellbeing of
lawyers. This is significant because legal systems cannot operate
without properly functioning lawyers. Changes considered include
rapidly evolving technologies such as the internet, artificial
intelligence and increasing digitisation, and innovations in legal
practice. Such innovations include changes in the structures of law
firms, changing requirements about whether lawyers must practice
separately from other professions and changing employment practices
in law firms.The Impact of Technology and Innovation on the
Well-Being of the Legal Profession considers the impact of all of
these developments on the legal profession. It begins with students
and how their responses to questions about their attitudes to
learning may provide clues as to why they and the professionals
they become might be more vulnerable to depression and anxiety than
the wider population. The analysis then extends to how both
satisfaction and stress levels can be simultaneously high and the
implications of this, considering the experiences of lawyers in
private and public practice, as well as academics, and their
responses to the interactions between all of these changes. Leading
researchers assess the situation in Australia and the United
Kingdom in these various domains, using empirical research as the
foundation of the arguments put forth.Anyone who is interested in
the future of the legal profession and the challenges currently
faced as a consequence of the massive structural and environmental
changes experienced should read this book.
Over 50 original tried and tested recipes which include Paella,
Mackerel Escabeche, Seafood Tagine, Crispy Squid, Lobster and many
more! Beautiful water colour illustrations by Alice Cleary.
Seasonal, sustainable and enjoyable to cook recipes for fish.
This book undertakes unique case studies, including interviews with
participants, as well as empirical analysis, of public and private
enforcement of Australian securities laws addressing continuous
disclosure. Enforcement of laws is crucial to effective regulation.
Historically, enforcement was the province of a government
regulator with significant discretion (public enforcement).
However, more and more citizens are being expected to take action
themselves (private enforcement). Consistent with regulatory
pluralism, public and private enforcement exist in parallel, with
the capacity to both help and hinder each other, and the
achievement of the goals of enforcement in a range of areas of
regulation. The rise of the shareholder class action in Australia,
backed by litigation funding or lawyers, has given rise to
enforcement overlapping with that of the government regulator, the
Australian Securities and Investments Commission. The ramifications
of overlapping enforcement are explained based on detailed
analysis. The analysis is further bolstered by the regulator’s
approach to enforcement changing from a compliance orientation to a
“Why not litigate?” approach. The analysis and ramifications of
the Australian case studies involve matters of regulatory theory
and practice that apply across jurisdictions. The book will appeal
to practitioners, regulators and academics interested in regulatory
policy and enforcement, and the operation of regulators and class
actions, including their interaction.
"Advance the Engine Summer" is the first published collection of
poems by Saint Paul, Minnesota writer/musician Michael Leggs. He
teaches English at Saint Paul College, and earned his M.A. in
English at Kansas State University as a recipient of the William H.
Hickok Creative Writing Fellowship. This collection includes
selections previously published in The Argotist, Pith, and American
Drivel Review.
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