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Detail of a high rise in Montreal. By Phil Deforges at https://unsplash.com/photos/ow1mML1sOi0

The ±«ÓãÖ±²¥ Business Law Meter Blog

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On 1 November 2021, ±«ÓãÖ±²¥'s Faculty of Law launched the ±«ÓãÖ±²¥ Business Law Meter, a blog for timely commentary and discussion of current developments in Canadian and transnational business law. Under the editorial leadership of the inaugural holder of the Professorship of Business Law, Peer Zumbansen, ±«ÓãÖ±²¥ Law students engage with hot button issues in corporate and securities, labour and commercial law, investment law, international economic law and private international law. The Meter welcomes feedback and commentary as well as submissions from guest writers. Guest submissions and inquiries should be sent to: peer.zumbansen [at] mcgill.ca

The latest in the Business Law Meter

22 Feb 2022
By providing an overview of major supply chain disruptions during the COVID-19 pandemic, with a particular focus on North America, Doctor of Civil Law student Federico Suárez Ricaurte argues that self-regulating markets and international free trade alone will be unable to overcome the supply chain crisis.
6 Feb 2022

The turn of the New Year marks the end of a tumultuous year for Facebook who, once again, found itself on the receiving end of public backlash.

7 Dec 2021

An important development in the transformation of the global banking and financial services market is the emergence of central bank digital currencies (CBDCs).

7 Dec 2021
Canadian wine is facing two major changes in the coming years: raising prices and climate warming. What role does Canada’s international trade obligations play in this change?
17 Nov 2021
Graduate Research Trainee Aliénor Burghartz traces recent developments in private digital currencies and argues that it is vital to develop a comprehensive regulatory framework for stablecoins in view of the broader goal of modernizing payment systems and improving financial inclusion.
1 Nov 2021
By looking at four key cases, BCL/LLB student Sharayer Rajabi argues that there is a growing sensibility of domestic courts towards the fact that multinational corporations’ private governing systems largely exist outside of the states’ regulatory capabilities.

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