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Book

Insider Trading in Developing Jurisdictions

Book

Insider Trading in Developing Jurisdictions

DOI link for Insider Trading in Developing Jurisdictions

Insider Trading in Developing Jurisdictions book

Achieving an effective regulatory regime

Insider Trading in Developing Jurisdictions

DOI link for Insider Trading in Developing Jurisdictions

Insider Trading in Developing Jurisdictions book

Achieving an effective regulatory regime
ByWunmi Bewaji
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2012
eBook Published 6 June 2012
Pub. Location London
Imprint Routledge
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203115497
Pages 336
eBook ISBN 9780203115497
Subjects Development Studies, Law, Social Sciences
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Bewaji, W. (2012). Insider Trading in Developing Jurisdictions: Achieving an effective regulatory regime (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203115497

ABSTRACT

The book examines the regulation of insider dealing in the developed jurisdictions, using three of the G7 countries as guides with the aim of knowing how they have regulated insider trading and what lessons can be learnt from their failures and achievements. It looks at regulatory regimes in the US, the UK and Japan in order to consider whether these regimes can be successfully transplanted to developing countries.

In order to explore insider dealing in the developing world the book focuses on Nigeria, Africa’s most populous nation and second largest economy. This book examines in theoretical and empirical terms the law on insider trading away from the dogmatic approach of Western literature by presenting the subject from the prism of a developing jurisdiction in post-colonial Africa with a divergent cultural, historical, social, political and economic background. The author analyses what shape insider dealing takes in Nigeria, a predominantly illiterate society, and considers the groups involved. The books also explores how the concept of insider dealing regulation is understood amongst parties integral to its administration and enforcement such as lawyers, judges, stockbrokers, and ordinary investors. The legislation governing insider dealing regulation in Nigeria is critically examined to expose its strengths and weaknesses, and to see how foreign provisions and legislation have been incorporated. The book uses Nigerian experiences to consider its implications for other developing nations, arguing that regulatory regimes need to take into account the specific social, political, historical and economic factors of a particular locale rather than importing regulations wholesale from developed jurisdictions.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

chapter 1|9 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|35 pages

Insider dealing: The crime of information

chapter 3|43 pages

Fighting a common enemy: Anglo-American and Japanese attitudes on insider dealing

chapter 4|54 pages

Flags of confusion: The limitations and frustrations of imitation

chapter 5|65 pages

A critical expedition into the Kingdom of Nigeria’s insider dealers

chapter 6|58 pages

Fixing the leaking roof of Nigeria’s insider dealing regulation

chapter 7|9 pages

Conclusion

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