
Lissa Lamkin Broome
· Burton Craige Distinguished Professor and Director of the Center for Banking and FinanceUniversity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill · Law
Active 1987–2026
About
Professor Lissa Lamkin Broome is involved with the Center for Banking and Finance at UNC School of Law, where she works closely with the North Carolina Banking Institute journal and the Banking Institute continuing legal education program. She serves as the faculty advisor for the journal, which publishes student notes and comments and interacts with banking industry professionals. Professor Broome's role includes guiding students in their journal work, attending the Banking Institute, and collaborating with the center’s board of advisors. She also participates in programs such as the Banking Institute, a two-day continuing legal education event for bankers and lawyers, and is involved in various enrichment opportunities for students, including practitioner visits, research assistantships, and career development activities.
Research topics
- Political Science
- Business
- Law
- Sociology
- Law and economics
- Computer Science
- Finance
- Economics
- International economics
- Medical emergency
- Medicine
- Accounting
- International trade
- Mathematics
Selected publications
North Carolina Banking Institute · 2026-03-01
articleOpen accessSenior authorFIU Law Review · 2024-03-19
articleOpen access1st authorCorrespondingThis article compares the government's legislative and regulatory response to each of the two financial crises that bookended the 2010-2020 decade and how the response to the COVID-19 crisis was affected by various provisions of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act enacted in 2010 in response to the 2008 financial crisis. The article concludes with six lessons we learned from these two financial crises experienced in relatively short order: act fast, act with force, act on multiple fronts, regain or retain citizens' confidence in the financial system, ensure access to liquidity, and aid those who are struggling.
A US Perspective on Equivalence
European Business Organization Law Review · 2023
1st authorCorresponding- Political Science
- Business
- Law and economics
Oxford University Press eBooks · 2022
1st authorCorresponding- Political Science
- Business
- Law
Abstract In the United States there is limited liability for financial supervisors and resolution authorities. Although the Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA) permits suit against the United States for certain torts to provide compensation for those injured by government wrongdoing, the statute has a significant exception for discretionary functions. This exception has been interpreted to cover most conduct of federal financial regulators. When a bank becomes insolvent, however, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) is appointed as its receiver and assumes all of the bank’s rights, including the ability to sue its former officers and directors for liability. In such suits, the officers and directors often assert affirmative defences based on the FDIC’s own conduct. The affirmative defences, if successful, only reduce the amount of the FDIC’s claims against the defendants and do not serve as a positive theory for recovery against the FDIC. Liability has been found, however, when the government promised the benefit of particular accounting practices to depository institutions that purchased failed thrifts but later enacted legislation that precluded the application of those accounting practices.
eYLS (Yale Law School) · 2022-03-01
articleSenior authoreYLS (Yale Law School) · 2021-03-01
articleSenior author2021: Disciplining Physicians Who Inflict Harm: New Legal Resources for State Medical Board Members
2021 · 1 citations
- Political Science
- Sociology
- Business
Serious ethical violations among physicians undermine public trust in the healthcare system and cause serious harm to patients. Egregious forms of wrongdoing that direct harm patients, such as sexual abuse, wrongful prescribing of controlled substances, and unnecessary surgeries, are particularly alarming. State medical boards are tasked with protecting the public by ensuring that physicians adhere to ethical guidelines and appropriate standards of care. However, it is unclear why boards sometimes fail to remove seriously offending physicians from practice in a timely manner or what measures would make boards more effective in protecting patients from harmful misconduct.\nThis conference will present the findings of an innovative Greenwall Foundation funded project that provides solutions to this problem. Working directly with state medical board members and other experts, the researchers have developed a consensus on the most important tools and practices needed to protect the public when physicians are accused of egregious wrongdoing, as well as barriers to adopting those tools and practices. The conference will focus on these findings and invite response to a carefully chosen set of recommendations for state statutory provisions for discussion.
eYLS (Yale Law School) · 2019-01-01
articleOpen access1st authorCorrespondingcan be used to raise capital for businesses. 2 But, the banking industry is one of the first industries to leverage the capabilities of blockchain. 3 In Part I, I will explore the involvement of banks and others in using blockchain for cross-border payments, the transfer of money from one country to a person or entity in another country-a function previously handled exclusively by banks without blockchain technology.Part II will briefly explore other potential applications of DLT in banking and discuss the involvement of banks with DLT through in-house technology development, forming consortia with other banks, or partnering with or investing in fintech firms.Fintech is the new buzz word that is short for financial technology.Fintech firms use technology to improve efficiencies in finance and financial transactions.In Part III, I will discuss how fintech firms may get involved in financial services in addition to partnerships with banks.Fintech firms may continue to operate independently and hope to reduce their regulatory burden through uniform state licensing requirements or by operating in states that have adopted regulatory sandboxes to encourage innovation.Alternatively, fintech firms may wish to consider the advantages afforded by operating through a bank charter.Several bank charter options are explored: a traditional bank charter, a 2 See generally Thomas Lee Hazen, Tulips, Oranges, Worms, and Coins -Virtual, Digital, or Crypto Currency and the Securities Laws, 20 N.C.J.L. & TECH.493 (2019) (examining applicability of federal securities laws to cryptocurrencies and the consequences thereof to transactions that deal in digital currencies).3 Blockchain is Reshaping the Banking Sector, MEDIUM (June 6, 2018), https://medium.com/universablockchain/blockchain-is-reshaping-the-banking-sector-fd84f2f9c475[https://perma.cc/Z989-DR9J]("Universa [develops blockchain solutions for] real sectors of the economy.Banking is one of the most promising spheres to benefit from the advantages of blockchain.");see also
Securitization, Structured Finance, and Capital Markets
Medical Entomology and Zoology · 2018-01-18 · 28 citations
bookOpen accessSenior authorThe Evolution of the Voice and Vote of Student-Athletes in NCAA Division I Governance
eYLS (Yale Law School) · 2018-01-01 · 1 citations
articleOpen access1st authorCorrespondingThis paper explores the evolution of the student-athlete voice and vote in the NCAA Division I governance structure.
Frequent coauthors
- 12 shared
Kimberly D. Krawiec
University of Virginia
- 12 shared
John M. Conley
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
- 4 shared
Jerry W. Markham
- 1 shared
Jennifer D. Oliva
- 1 shared
Bruce A. Markell
- 1 shared
Tristan McIntosh
Washington University in St. Louis
- 1 shared
Peter Aiken
Virginia Commonwealth University
- 1 shared
John Charles Boger
Education
- 1982
B.A., Political Science
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
- 1985
Other
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
- 1988
M.A., Public Policy
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
- 1991
Ph.D., Public Policy
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Awards & honors
- McCall Award for Teaching Excellence (1986)
- McCall Award for Teaching Excellence (1992)
- McCall Award for Teaching Excellence (1995)
- McCall Award for Teaching Excellence (1998)
- Induction into the McCall Master Teachers' Society for Teach…
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