General Course Information
1.1 Course details
Course code: | LLAW6126 / JDOC6126 |
Course name: | e-Finance: Law, Compliance and Technology Challenges |
Programme offered under: | LLM Programme / JD Programme |
Semester: | June |
Prerequisites / Co-requisites: | No |
Credit point value: | 9 credits / 6 credits |
1.2 Course description
The overall aim of this course is to help students understand how money is legally made in contemporary legal orders with a special emphasis on the recent proliferation of alternative forms of money like cryptocurrencies.
The course is organized in 4 units. The first one will broach conceptions of money from a theoretical perspective, covering the most important definitions of what counts as money from a legal perspective. The second one will be dedicated to the legal architecture of money in the contemporary State. This section will focus especially on constitutional provisions about money, the definition of legal tender, the creation of independent central banks, and the concept of central banks’ reserve. The third section (the longest one) will analyse the legal nature of some of the most important cryptocurrencies (Bitcoin, Ether, XRP) by looking at case law, legal regulation by parliaments and executives, regulation by independent or semi-independent agencies (tax and revenues agencies, security and exchange commission, etc etc), and other uses by code-designers themselves, such as NFTs or smart contracts. The analysis will be conducted from a comparative perspective and will cover some of the most important jurisdictions. The fourth part of the course will cover some potential future experiments currently under consideration by public institutions in certain States with these new forms of money: central bank digital currencies and the people’s ledger.
1.3 Course teachers
Name | E-mail address | Office | Consultation | |
Course convenor | Marco Goldoni | Marco.goldoni@glasgow.ac.uk | TBA | By email |
Learning Outcomes
2.1 Course Learning Outcomes (CLOs) for this course
CLO 1 On successful completion of the course, students should be able to distinguish and understand the main defining traits of the most influential legal conceptions of money, and to assess the political, moral and social complexity surrounding monetary policies and regulations in the contemporary world.
CLO 2 On successful completion of the course, students should be able to apply legal conceptions of the law to a different array of cryptocurrencies and to the legal issues that have arisen since the introduction of these new currencies.
CLO 3 On successful completion of the course students should be able to describe and critique the impact of technological and monetary innovation in contemporary legal orders, and the relative contributions of legislators, regulators, courts, code designers, social movements in addressing the novelty represented by these new forms of money.
2.2 LLM and JD Programme Learning Outcomes (PLOs)
Please refer to the following link:
LLM – https://course.law.hku.hk/llm-plo/
JD – https://course.law.hku.hk/jd-plo/
2.3 Programme Learning Outcomes to be achieved in this course
PLO A | PLO B | PLO C | PLO D | PLO E | PLO F | |
CLO 1 | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
CLO 2 | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
CLO 3 | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
Assessment(s)
3.1 Assessment Summary
Assessment task | Due date | Weighting | Feedback method* | Course learning outcomes |
Participation in class | N/A | 10% | 1, 3 | 1, 2, 3 |
Online multiple choice questions | TBA | 10% | 1 | 1, 2 |
Take home exam | TBA | 80% | 1, 3 | 1, 2, 3 |
*Feedback method (to be determined by course teacher) | |
1 | A general course report to be disseminated through Moodle |
2 | Individual feedback to be disseminated by email / through Moodle |
3 | Individual review meeting upon appointment |
4 | Group review meeting |
5 | In-class verbal feedback |
3.2 Assessment Detail
To be advised by course convenor(s).
3.3 Grading Criteria
Please refer to the following link: https://www.law.hku.hk/_files/law_programme_grade_descriptors.pdf
Learning Activities
4.1 Learning Activity Plan
Seminar | 3-hour seminars in an intensive mode in June semester |
Private study time: | 9.5 hours / week for 12 teaching weeks |
Remarks: the normative student study load per credit unit is 25 ± 5 hours (ie. 150 ± 30 hours for a 6-credit course), which includes all learning activities and experiences within and outside of classroom, and any assessment task and examinations and associated preparations.
4.2 Details of Learning Activities
Part I. Legal conceptions of money
I.A. Markets and currency: Hayek
I.B. The Constitutional concept of money
I.C. Modern Monetary Theory
I.D. The Social Ontology of Money
Part II. The Legal Architecture of Money
II.A. Legal Tender
II.B. Independent Central Banks
II.C. Central Banks’ Reserve and the Banking System
Part III. The Legal nature of Cryptocurrencies
III.A. Blockchain and the most important Cryptos
III.B. Comparative analysis of case law on Bitcoin and XRP
III.C. Regulators and the legal nature of cryptocurrencies: money, security, property
III.D. NFTs and Smart Contracts: technological features and case law
Part IV. Public experiments with Crypto
IV.A. Central Bank digital Currencies
IV.B. The People’s ledger and Quantitative easing for the people
Learning Resources
5.1 Resources
Reading materials: | Reading materials are posted on Moodle |
Core reading list: | TBA |
Recommended reading list: | TBA |
5.2 Links
Please refer to the following link: http://www.law.hku.hk/course/learning-resources/