Law and Political Economy Projects presents International Law of Money
For the past two decades, the legal construction of money has received increasing attention from scholars of history and (heterodox) economics. Legal scholarship on the international law of money has lagged behind. Yet, it is widely recognized that international monetary dynamics are key to the democracy-curbing effects of neoliberalism as expressed through the ‘Washington Consensus’ and enforced by the International Monetary Fund (IMF). This panel is aimed at exploring the wider context of the international law of money (which is central to the international dimensions of neoliberalism) encouraging the development of this area of scholarship as a conscious sub-field of international law. Feb 8, 2021 8:00am pacific 90 min
Panel (register and download panelist presentations here)
• John Haskell (University of Manchester School of Law), The Political Economy Turn in International Law and Why Money Matters
• Karina Patrício Ferreira Lima (University of Leeds School of Law; Durham Law School), Legal Political Economy of Sovereign Insolvency Governance
• Nathan Tankus, (Modern Money Network & “Notes on the Crises”),
Monetary Sovereignty and the Federal Reserve’s International COVID-19 Response
• Rohan Grey, (Willamette University College of Law, Modern Money Network, Digital Fiat Currency Institute), The International Law of Digital Currency