MASTER
MAR 1.04 Marshall BuildingLondon, United Kingdom
 
 

Fintech and Digital Finance Masterclass - Session 1

By LSE Law School (other events)

Thursday, October 17 2024 6:30 PM 8:00 PM BST
 
ABOUT ABOUT

Certificates will be provided to participants who attend all five Sessions.

It is mandatory for all participants to present their valid LSE ID cards upon arrival at each masterclass. Failure to do so will regrettably result in denial of entry.

This certificate Master Class Series at LSE Law School is designed to provide students with a comprehensive introduction to regulatory and commercial law issues arising in the sphere of ‘FinTech’ and ‘Digital Finance’. Both terms are used interchangeably and refer to technology-enabled financial services and products that are either novel, or traditional and provided in structurally novel ways. FinTech and Digital Finance do not have an existence apart, rather, they are part of the continuously evolving financial market as it keeps developing.

Discussion on FinTech typically focusses on terms such as blockchain, stablecoin, CBDC, robo-advice, and mobile payment. However, to really understand these developments and identify key structural trends they are best discussed by reference to a number of – wider – central themes, notably regulatory arbitrage, the increasing use of technology, datafication, and the convergence of financial services with other markets, such as social media and e-commerce.

Our Convene Master Class Series will break down these developments and set them into their regulatory and legal context. It cuts across matters addressed in the curriculum at LSE Law School, such as financial regulation and financial law, commercial and corporate law, data regulation and competition law.

This course is open exclusively to LLM and LLB students at LSE Law School. It is designed to be co-curricular (i.e., not part of the LLM or LLB curricula) and complement other relevant courses.

Students will earn a certificate for attending 3 or more sessions, but the course will not count as credit, to put towards any degree, nor will it be examinable.

Speakers: Philipp Paech, Elisabeth Noble