In Debtor Protection in American and European Union Bankruptcy Law,
international law scholar Dimitris Liakopulos raises a delicate issue at
the foundations of the modern banking system by analyzing US bankruptcy
law with a focus on the concept of automatic stay. His work identifies
legal sources and authorities having repercussions in terms of
operational protection. It then examines their functional profiles, with
specific regard to procedure. The book then examines criminal exposure
in US bankruptcy law, paying particular attention to crime figures
closer to those contained in American bankruptcy law. The book's third
part assesses the lack of a discipline in these areas, a cumbersome gap
observable at both the international and regional levels. The financial
crisis of 2008 recalled the necessity and importance of a coordinated
and usable crisis resolution mechanism for large financial
conglomerates. The lack of discipline in the field of cross-border
insolvency, and especially in the banking sector, stands out among
studies and legislative instruments that have attempted to address
questions of private international law, and of procedural law or of
substantive law.