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OverviewSecurity Over Receivables: An International Handbook is a practical guide to the key issues involved in taking security over receivables in 39 jurisdictions. Adopting a jurisdiction by jurisdiction structure, each chapter examines the key matters to consider when taking security over debts in a particular region. Each analysis is followed by a case study, to exemplify and elucidate the central principles which arise in practice. A comparative table is also included to outline and illustrate the distinguishing aspects of taking security over debts in each country. The chapter from UNCITRAL gives a useful explanation of the position from an international law perspective. This work is a valuable preliminary reference point for practitioners advising on finance transactions, which involve security over receivables in a foreign jurisdiction. Jurisdictions covered include: Argentina, Australia, Austria, Belgium, Brazil, Canada, Chile, China, Czech Republic, Denmark, England, Finland, France, Germany, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Japan, Kuwait, Luxembourg, Mexico, Netherlands, New York, New Zealand, Poland, Russian Federation, Scotland, Singapore, South Korea, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey, Ukraine, United Arab Emirates and Venezuela. With contributions from well-respected lawyers from leading international firms in each jurisdiction, this book provides practitioners worldwide with considerable assistance when dealing with cross-border transactions in a number of different jurisdictions. Full Product DetailsAuthor: William Johnston (Partner, Arthur Cox)Publisher: Oxford University Press Imprint: Oxford University Press Dimensions: Width: 17.80cm , Height: 4.60cm , Length: 25.30cm Weight: 1.542kg ISBN: 9780199550456ISBN 10: 019955045 Pages: 824 Publication Date: 25 September 2008 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order ![]() Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of Contents1: Alejandro D. Fiuza and Pablo Gayol: Argentina 2: Jodi Fullerton-Healey and Jon Carson: Australia 3: Stefan Tiefenthaler and Klemens Keferböck: Austria 4: Marc Vermylen: Belgium 5: Fernando Ruiz de Almeida Prado and Fabio Falkenburger: Brazil 6: Simon Finch: Canada 7: Marcel Armas M.: Chile 8: Xusheng Yang: China 9: Dana Schweigelová: Czech Republic 10: Niels Walther-Rasmussen and Simon Falbe-Hansen: Denmark 11: Timothy Parsons: England 12: Tarja Wist: Finland 13: Olivier Hubert: France 14: Hendrik Haag and Oliver Peglow: Germany 15: Lee Aitken: Hong Kong 16: H. Jayesh: India 17: Emir Nurmansyah and Agus Ahadi Deradjat: Indonesia 18: William Johnston: Ireland 19: Keith Shaw: Israel 20: Lisa Curran: Italy 21: Takuya Oshida: Japan 22: Jasmin Paurus Kohina: Kuwait 23: Michel Molitor: Luxembourg 24: Pablo Perezalonso: Mexico 25: Willem (Pim) Rank: Netherlands 26: Elizabeth A. Roff: New York 27: Matt Yarnell and Richard May: New Zealand 28: Ewa Butkiewicz and Krzysztof Wojdylo: Poland 29: Anna Ivanova and Elena Stepanenko: Russian Federation 30: Bruce Stephen: Scotland 31: Andrew Chan and Tay Yong Seng: Singapore 32: Suhn-Kyoung Hong and Jang-Ho Kim: South Korea 33: David García-Ochoa and Pedro Ravina: Spain 34: David Zoran Stambolovski and Hans Abrahamsson: Sweden 35: Markus Pfenninger and Rahel Gimmel: Switzerland 36: Gözde Çankaya, Ali Can Kolay and Tunc Sozen: Turkey 37: Yaroslav Gregirchak: Ukraine 38: Haider Khan Afridi, Liliya Altshuler and Jayanthi Guru: United Arab Emirates 39: Patrick Petzall: Venezuela 40: Spiros V. Bazinas: UNCITRALReviewsAuthor InformationWilliam Johnston is a partner and head of the Banking Law Group of Arthur Cox, Dublin. An economics graduate of Trinity College Dublin, he has extensive experience in banking finance, aviation financing and bank and consumer credit regulation. William is Co-chair of the Legal Opinions Committee for the Banking Law Section of the IBA and is a former chairman of the Business Law Committee of The Law Society (of Ireland) where he lectures on banking regulation and legal opinions. A member of the statutory Company Law Review Group he has authored 'Banking and Security Law in Ireland' (Butterworths 1998), co-authored 'Structuring Company Lending after the Company Law Enforcement Act 2001' (Butterworths 2001), co-edited 'Set-Off Law & Practice' (OUP 2006) and 'Arthur Cox Banking Law Handbook' (Tottel 2007). He has written the Irish chapters in 'Neate: Bank Confidentiality' (Tottel 2006) and in 'Griffiths: International Acquisition Finance' (OUP 2006). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |