This work provides a ready reckoner on the cause and effects of the global credit crisis and some guidance on how history can perhaps not repeat itself. Anthony Lo Surdo Australian Banking and Finance Bulletin Vol 25 No 6, December 2009/January 2010 It's a good collection of work and is a good entry way into the literature for anyone wanting to think about these issues from a global perspective. Professor Robert M. Lawless Credit Slips October 2009 The book's twenty papers are sharply focused on the topic of comparative and international consumer overindebtedness. The editors chose these papers from thirty presented at the conference. Some are excellent, even read in isolation. Nearly all are very good. Even the few that are neither were included for a reason: they provide the only windows available into the consumer credit and bankruptcy systems of particular countries...Whatever the future may hold, Consumer Credit is now the state of the art in the very lively field of comparative consumer credit and bankruptcy. This book is a necessity for anyone working or interested in that field. Lynn M. LoPucki American Journal of Comparative Law Volume 58, No. 2.