Page 9 to 19: Pervenche Berès and Sylvie Matherat – Introduction | Page 23 to 40: David Wright – Brexit: freedom or tragedy? | Page 43 to 54: John Berrigan and Olivier Guersent – Six years following Brexit: relations between the European Union and the United Kingdom in terms of competition policy and financial services regulation | Page 55 to 69: Andrea Enria – Brexit and the EU banking sector: from internal market fundamental freedoms to third country status | Page 71 to 81: José Manuel Campa – Reflections on post-Brexit EU financial regulation | Page 83 to 92: Christian Noyer – Paris and other European financial centers following Brexit | Page 93 to 109: Xavier Musca – The economic and financial aspects of post-Brexit: competition and complementarity | Page 113 to 126: Hervé Hélias – The unfinished business of Brexit: the implications for businesses | Page 127 to 139: Stéphane Boujnah – The day following Brexit | Pages 141 to 152: Denis Beau – What restructuring of financial services in the EU27 following Brexit? | Page 153 to 162: Robert Ophèle – Post-Brexit remains to be written | Pages 163 to 178: Srobona Mitra and Mahmood Pradhan – Did the links between EU and UK financial markets survive Brexit? | Page 179 to 191: Catherine Mathieu – Brexit: is it now? | Page 193 to 212: Roger Liddle – The opportunities of Brexit? | Page 213 to 219: Philippe Aghion – For a new cooperation following Brexit | Page 221 to 237: Jean-Daniel Boyer – Was John Law really the son of Éole? John Law: monetary stability and the monarchy subservient to the General Bank (1704-1719) | Page 239 to 241: Alain-Gérard Slama – Science and literature: reconciling “the two cultures” | Page 243 to 245: Alain-Gérard Slama – From Chateaubriand to Brexit: the “double bind” of modernity | Page 249 to 272: Guillaume L’Œillet – Modern monetary theory: misconceptions, real limits and blind spots. A roundup of reviews.