Research and Markets (http://www.researchandmarkets.com/reports/c43017) has announced the addition of Redesigning Financial
Regulation: The Politics of Enforcement to their offering.
At the height of the 1990s boom, Jack Grubman, one of the most successful analysts in Wall Street proclaimed 's8216;what used to be conflicts of interest are now synergies's8217;. This
myopia contributed dramatically to the elevation of a culture in which greed was deified, oversight denigrated and misfeasance justified. Since the fall of the markets and the implosion
of confidence in the American corporate business model, one man has proved instrumental in deconstructing the rhetoric of the 1990s: Eliot Spitzer, the combative Attorney General of New
York. In the process, his innovative application of state law has reconfigured the governance of Wall Street.
Over the past three years the pursuit of transparency and accountability in the structure of the markets has propelled Spitzer to the forefront of regulatory policy. His investigations
into tainted analyst research, the mutual funds industry, the governance of the New York Stock Exchange and the insurance industry have focused attention not just on corrupted individuals
but also the complicity of the financial structure itself. Spitzer exploited the inherent conflicts of interest to the full, forcing regulators to adopt a much more proactive approach and
creating a national platform for his own wider political ambitions. Now holding the Democratic nomination for the Governorship of New York, Spitzer has begun a path for higher national
office.
This groundbreaking book features exclusive access with many of the key actors in these changes to the governance of Wall Street. It examines how Eliot Spitzer exploited gaps in the
regulatory framework to capture the corporate reform agenda and explores the implications of his actions on policy formation and recalibration.
Key incidents include: changing the terms of reference governing analyst research; the defenestration of Dick Grasso's8217;s tenure over the NYSE (which is now being heard in state court
in New York); and the battles for control between the former Chairman of the Securities Exchange Commission, Harvey Pitt, and Spitzer.
The book details not only the contested, contingent and interdependent connections between the American political and financial systems but reveals how Spitzer's8217;s manipulation of
those connections have proved instrumental in enhancing his own wider political ambitions.
About the author
Justin O Brien is Professor of Corporate Governance at the Centre for Applied Philosophy and Public Ethics, based at the Australian National University. He previously ran the corporate
governance programme at the School of Law, Queen's8217;s University Belfast. He is the Principal Investigator of Regulatory Regime Change in World Financial Markets, an international
research project funded by the Economic and Social Research Council in the United Kingdom. He is the author of Wall Street on Trial and the editor of Governing the Corporation. Professor
O Brien has also written extensively on political corruption. His current research centres on the ethical dimension of managing conflicts in the financial services industry. He lives in
Canberra.
Contents Include:
Author's8217;s note. 1 Redesigning financial regulation: the politics of enforcement. 2 Taming the corporation Sarbanes's8211;Oxley and the politics of symbolism. 3 Enforcing power: the
contested role of Eliot Spitzer. 4 The limitations of the criminal process. 5 Corporate governance and the institutionalization of compliance. 6 The efficacy and pitfalls of pre-trial
diversion. 7 Global markets, regulatory enforcement and the dynamics of corporate crime. 8 Transcending compliance. Index.
For more information visit http://www.researchandmarkets.com/reports/c43017
Laura Wood
Senior Manager
Research and Markets
Fax: +353 1 684 99 77