Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Intro; Acknowledgements; Contents; Introduction; I. The Scenario; II. Inclusion, Finance and Private Law; III. Methodology; IV. Structure; 1. The Idea of Financial and Social Inclusion; I. Dimensions of Financial and Social Inclusion; II. The Rise of Social Inclusion and Its Merging with Financial Inclusion; III. The Transformations of State and Law; IV. Financialisation; V. Privatised Keynesianism and Democratisation of Finance; VI. The Role of Trust; VII. Passing the Risk; VIII. The Other Side of the Coin; IX. Re-regulation?; 2. Financial and Social Inclusion in the European Legal Order.
  • I. An EU AffairII. Distinguishing the Forms of Inclusion in Europe; III. A Just or an Inclusive Private Law?; IV. The Rise of Inclusion in European Law; V. In European Contract Law; 3. Access to a Bank Account; I.A Gateway to the Market; II. Legal Frameworks in Europe; III. The Problems of Overdrafts; IV. EU Involvement; V. The Recommendation; VI. The Problem of Reasonable Costs; VII. The New Directive; 4. Access to Credit; I. From a Right to a Bank Account to a Right to Credit?; II. Responsible Lending and the Problem of Self-Interest; III. Responsible Lending and European Contract Law.
  • IV. Access to InformationV. Post-Crisis Responses and the Mortgage Credit Directive; VI. The Public-Private Problem; VII. Financial Stability and Exclusion; VIII. Back to Trust; 5. Over-Indebtedness; I. How Much is too Much?; II. Legal Responses; III. Causes of Over-Indebtedness and their Legal Appreciation; IV. A Categorisation of Private Law Responses to Over-Indebtedness; V. European Over-Indebtedness Law; 6. Financial Education; I. Just Gonna have to be a Different Man; II. The Rise of the Policy of Financial Education; III. Critical Aspects of the Policy of Financial Education.
  • IV. Interference with Contract LawConclusion; Bibliography; European Institutions; International Institutions; National Authorities and Central Banks; Index.