The Beijing Consensus and Possible Lessons from the 'Singapore Model'?
In: Cambridge University Press, Dr CHEN Weitseng of the NUS law school (editor), Forthcoming
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In: Cambridge University Press, Dr CHEN Weitseng of the NUS law school (editor), Forthcoming
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Working paper
In: Singapore Journal of Legal Studies, Jul 2012
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In: Singapore Journal of Legal Studies, pp. 201-215, December 2007
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In: In Victor Ramraj (ed.), Covid-19 in Asia: Law and Policy Contexts (Oxford University Press, 2020) (Forthcoming)
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A strong reciprocal relationship has existed between Singapore Company Law (SCL) and the economy since Independence in 1965. Swift Parliamentary responses to economic events and successful implementation of Government policies has made it possible to clearly attribute cause and effect to statutory amendments and economic events in turn, proving the reciprocal relationship between the two. The first theme of this article seeks to explain the fundamental characteristics of SCL that have resulted in such an unusually strong reciprocal relationship: (1) Autochthonous nature of SCL; (2) Responsive nature of legislation; and (3) Government control at multiple levels of implementation. The second theme examines the interplay between: (1) Domestic political and economic events; and (2) Foreign laws and economic events in influencing legislative responses over time and their impact on SCL. This will be done through an examination of four key areas of SCL over 50 years of Singapore economic history.
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In: NUS Law Working Paper No. 2019/025
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In: (2019) 27(1) Asia Pacific Law Review 14-38
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A strong reciprocal relationship has existed between Singapore Company Law ("SCL") and the economy since Independence in 1965. Swift Parliamentary responses to economic events and successful implementation of Government policies has made it possible to clearly attribute cause and effect to statutory amendments and economic events in turn, proving the reciprocal relationship between the two. The first theme of this paper seeks to explain the fundamental characteristics of SCL that have resulted in such an unusually strong reciprocal relationship: the 1) Autochthonous nature of SCL; 2) Responsive nature of legislation; and 3) Government control at multiple levels of implementation. The second theme examines the interplay between 1) Domestic political and economic events; and 2) Foreign laws and economic events in influencing legislative responses over time and their impact on SCL. This will be done through an examination of four key areas of SCL over fifty years of Singapore economic history.
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"This book is the first to examine intermediaries in a holistic and systematic manner. The classical model of face-to-face contracting between two individuals is no longer dominant. Instead, deals frequently involve a number of parties, often acting through intermediaries. As a result, it is important to understand the role and power of intermediaries. Intermediaries tend to be considered within discrete silos of the law. But by focussing upon a particular, narrow area of law, lessons are not learned from analogous situations. This book takes a broader approach, and looks across the traditional boundaries of private law in order to gain a proper assessment of the role played by intermediaries. A wide range of jurisdictions and topical issues are discussed in order to illuminate the role intermediaries play in commercial law. For example, the continued growth of electronic commerce requires consideration of the role of websites and other platforms as intermediaries. And developments in artificial intelligence raise the prospect of intermediaries being non-human actors. All these issues are subject to rigorous analysis by the expert contributors to this book."--
In: Singapore Academy of Law Annual Review of Cases 2016, pp. 235-256 (2017)
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In: Singapore Academy of Law Annual Review of Cases 2015, p. 255, 2016
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In: NUS Centre for Technology, Robotics, Artificial Intelligence & the Law Working Paper 21/02, to be published in Ernest Lim and Phillip Morgan (eds), The Cambridge Handbook of Private Law and Artificial Intelligence (Cambridge University Press, Forthcoming)
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In: 16:1 Berkeley Business Law Journal, 140-204 (2019)
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Working paper
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In: 28 Columbia Journal of Asian Law 61-97(2015)
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