Company law Books
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Corporate Social Responsibility, Private Law and
Book Synopsis'Rühmkorf's thought-provoking book has a powerful message: that we cannot rely on the discretion of business to promote CSR voluntarily. Through the devastating example of the Rana Plaza disaster, Rühmkorf shows that we must get beyond business rhetoric and develop a multidimensional approach to the regulation of global supply chains. Whilst recognising the existing limitations of private law, his book highlights the potential contribution of private law to the development and promotion of CSR. The task is not an easy one, but by adopting a pluralistic approach to corporate law and by employing contract law, consumer law and tort law more dynamically, English private law could fill many of the regulatory gaps. The message is urgent and strong. This is a must read book for anyone concerned with CSR, supply chains and the law.'- Charlotte Villiers, University of Bristol, UK'This book fills an important gap in discussions of international CSR standards. It is all very well to say that states must protect and companies should respect human rights, but when breaches of human rights do occur, it is remedies that matter. Rühmkorf explores the limits of private law avenues for seeking such remedies. In so doing, he provides a valuable understanding of obstacles to fuller realization of the three-pillared ''Protect, Respect and Remed'' Framework of the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights. - Alice de Jonge, Monash University, AustraliaCurrent debate surrounding social responsibility has neglected to fully comprehend the important role of national private law in achieving socially responsible conduct in business. This insightful book demonstrates how private law makes a significant contribution to the promotion of corporate social responsibility (CSR) and how it could be improved.Based on the analysis of four substantive areas (company law/corporate governance, contract law, consumer law and tort law), this inclusive book covers a full range of issues that are important for CSR. These include directors duties, corporate reporting, the incorporation of CSR policies into the supply chain, consumer rights and the tortious liabilities of companies. The book discerns how national private law in the home state of multinational enterprises can legally affect their socially responsible conduct worldwide. Andreas Rühmkorf demonstrates that private law already promotes and, with certain amendments, could better promote CSR in the regulation of global supply chains. The book's findings are applied to the collapse of the Rana Plaza Building in Bangladesh, which offers a supportive empirical insight.As an up-to-date and comprehensive survey of CSR and global supply chains, this work will benefit researchers and practitioners interested in the fields of CSR, private law, international law, political economy, international labor standards and sustainable supply chains.Trade Review'Rühmkorf provides a valued addition in understanding the benefits of a holistic CSR business model and a company's duty as a socially responsible international market participant. In his book Corporate Social Responsibility, Private Law and Global Supply Chains, Dr. Andreas Rühmkorf, a lawyer and professor of commercial law, proposes how English private law can be used to ensure corporations that utilize global supply chains are held accountable for violations of their own corporate governance. Rühmkorf's work will be of use to those interested in Corporate Social Responsibility, and the law, economics and politics surrounding international supply chains.' --Patricia M. Muhammad, International Social Science Review'This book, Corporate Social Responsibility, Private Law and Global Supply Chains by Dr. Andreas Rühmkorf, makes a considerable contribution to the literature on Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR). . . .I would recommend the book very strongly to all academics and postgraduate students interested in company and corporations law. The book is focused on an important aspect, CSR, in the wider debate and worldwide realisation that companies should move away from 'short-termism' and focus on long-term and sustainable growth and should be responsible citizens!' --Jean J. du Plessis, Deakin Law School, Deakin University, Australia'This book offers a broad and deep analysis of the topic; and it could be of interest for researchers and student researchers as well as for directors and non-executive directors, company secretaries and officers dealing with the ongoing analysis of corporate social responsibility.' --International Company and Commercial Law ReviewTable of ContentsContents: 1. Corporate Social Responsibility and Private Law 2. Company Law, Corporate Governance and Corporate Social Responsibility 3. Contract Law, Global Supply Chains and Corporate Social Responsibility 4. Consumer Protection Law and Corporate Social Responsibility 5. Tort Law and Corporate Social Responsibility 6. The Promotion of Corporate Social Responsibility in English Private Law 7. The Rana Plaza Building Collapse – Corporate Social Responsibility, Private Law and the Global Supply Chain Bibliography Index
£104.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Comparative Corporate Governance: Legal
Book SynopsisComparative Corporate Governance considers the impact of globalization on corporate governance issues and highlights how, despite the effect it has clearly had, predictions of legal convergence have not come true. By adopting a comparative legal approach, this book explores the tensions that exist between convergence attempts and the persistence of local models of governance in the US, Europe and Asia. Veronique Magnier assesses institutional, cultural and sociological factors as features of the disparities in governance. She does so by addressing the three main areas of tension in the legal aspects of corporate governance: theoretical pressure, which pits shareholder primacy against models advocating for greater participation of large corporations in general economic welfare; technical regulation, such as integrating corporate governance codes into national legal systems; and the need for context and reflection when transplanting governance approaches to different countries. Varying economic, societal and cultural environments make it vital to contextualize corporate governance in order to better understand how governance models operate in a globalized world. Lawyers, academics and advanced students of law looking to improve their understanding of corporate governance will find this a diverse and rewarding read.Table of ContentsContents: Part I. Corporate governance legal models 1. Legal aspects of corporate governance models 2. Worldwide adoption of corporate governance models Part II. Corporate governance codes 3. A new regulatory technique for global corporations 4. The integration of codes into national legal systems 5. The efficiency of corporate governance codes Part III. Corporate governance standards 6. Standards from shareholders’ perspective 7. Standards from directors’ perspective Index
£89.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Research Handbook on the History of Corporate and
Book SynopsisToday, the corporation plays a dominant role in economics, politics, and societies across the globe. Understanding the corporation means understanding its legal framework but until recently, the origins and evolution of corporate law have received relatively little attention. This Handbook sheds new light on the historical development of both the corporation and business organization law.This extensive collection brings together contributions from an array of international academics to provide the first wide-ranging history of the laws of corporations and business organizations from ancient to modern times. The contributors offer a global exploration of the development of corporation and company law, moving beyond the United States and Western Europe to present studies in Mexico, India and China, as well as addressing the trajectory of scholarly debate. Not only do the contributions examine the growth of the law of public corporation, they also address the development of laws governing other business forms.This Handbook will prove an invaluable resource for corporation law and business scholars, as well as business and legal historians and economists.Contributors include: B. Aronson, A. Aviram, W. Bratton, G. Del Angel, M. Gelter, A. Gomez-Galvarriato, Y. González de Lara, T.W. Guinnane, R. Harris, L. Johnson, V. Khanna, T. Kuntz, S. Martínez-Rodríguez, D.T. Mitchell, M.T. Moore, J. Rochat, J. Rubin, T. Ruskola, G. Sandrelli, F.L. Stewart, J.D. Turner, U. Varottil, M. Ventoruzzo, M. Wachter, H. Wells, R.E. WrightTrade Review‘If you are a business historian, you should read this book, regardless of the historical period or industry you study. Whether your research is on firms that are called Ltd or Inc or S.A. or GmbH, you will find this Research Handbook to be an extremely useful introduction to the world of corporate governance theory. This book will be particularly important to business historians interested in transnational and comparative historical topics.’ -- Andrew Smith, Business History'For anyone interested in the modern corporation this book is invaluable, a real treasure trove. With an admirable breadth and depth of scholarship, it fills a notable gap in the literature on a fundamental aspect of the corporate form. Thoroughly recommended for both scholars and students.' --Nicholas H.D. Foster, SOAS University of London, UK'Historical analysis of corporate law has become something of growth industry lately. The Research Handbook on the History of Corporate and Company Law will no doubt move quickly to the forefront of this burgeoning literature. The essays, each impressive individually, combine to provide a volume that is strikingly wide-ranging, both in terms of the eras covered and the jurisdictions canvassed.' --Brian R. Cheffins, University of Cambridge, UK‘The Research Handbook on the History of Corporate and Company Law is especially recommended to faculty and students of graduate programs in business and law. Law libraries and academic libraries should consider purchasing this research handbook.' -- American Reference Books AnnualTable of ContentsContents: Introduction Harwell Wells Part I Taking Shape 1. Islamic Law and Economic Development Jared Rubin 2. Business Organizations in India Prior to the British East India Company Vikramaditya Khanna 3. Business Organization and Organizational Innovation in Late Medieval Italy Yadira González de Lara 4. Trading with Strangers: The Corporate Form in the Move from Municipal Governance to Overseas Trade Ron Harris Part II Modern Europe 5. The Development of English Company Law before 1900 John D. Turner 6. Shareholder Primacy, Labour, and the Historic Ambivalence of UK Company Law Marc T. Moore 7. German Company Law 1794-1897 Timothy W. Guinnane 8. German Corporate Law in the 20th Century Thilo Kuntz 9. Change for Continuity: The Making of the Société Anonyme in nineteenth Century France Jean Rochat 10. Classes of Shares and Voting Rights in the History of Italian Corporate Law Giulio Sandrelli and Marco Ventoruzzo 11. A History of the Corporation in Spain in the Twentieth Century: Towards Europe Susana Martínez-Rodríguez 12. EU Company Law Harmonization Between Convergence and Varieties of Capitalism Martin Gelter Part III Asia 13. Corporation Law in Late Imperial China Teemu Ruskola 14. The Stakeholder Approach to Corporate Law: A Historical Perspective from India Umakanth Varottil 15. Japanese Corporate Law and Corporate Governance in Historical Perspective Bruce Aronson Part IV North America 16. The Evolution of Mexican Mercantile and Corporate Laws Aurora Gomez-Galvarriato and Gustavo A. Del Angel 17. A History of Canadian Corporate Law: A Divergent Path from the American Model? Fenner L. Stewart 18. For- and Non-profit Special Corporations in America, 1608-1860 Robert E. Wright 19. Legitimating Power: A Brief History of Modern U.S. Corporate Law Dalia T. Mitchell 20. Adolf Berle, E. Merrick Dodd and the New American Corporatism of 1932 William W. Bratton and Michael L. Wachter 21. Corporate Law and the History of Corporate Social Responsibility Lyman Johnson 22. Evolutionary Models of Corporate Law Amitai Aviram Index
£206.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Derivative Actions and Corporate Governance in
Book SynopsisThis book examines corporate governance rules in China, and highlights the deficiencies in current company law, with the purpose of arguing for a more effective derivative action mechanism, for the benefit of shareholders and their companies.Throughout the book, Jingchen focuses on how to build a more effective, accessible and balanced mechanism for derivation action in order to promote more sound corporate governance in China. He examines two significant questions, namely - the possibility of transplanting legal regimes and rules from other jurisdictions, and how this sits against the practical experiences from the last fifteen years. The book includes discussions of both the legal issues that hinder the efficient and sound enforcement of derivative claims, as well as suggestions for reform, supported and underpinned by corporate governance theories.Derivative Actions and Corporate Governance in China will be a key resource for academics, practitioners, fund managers and postgraduate students in the fields of Asian law and corporate law and governance. Trade Review‘This new monograph by Professor Jingchen Zhao casts a light upon the use of derivative actions in the law of shareholder protection in China. Zhao’s well written and superbly researched text examines in forensic detail this relatively new feature of Company Law in China. It sets the scene by offering valuable insights into the Corporate Law and Governance context in China. The text reflects expertly upon the Chinese position after some 15 years of experience of derivative actions in that jurisdiction. It is a monograph that should be read by all scholars of comparative Company Law. Practitioners with links to and interest in shareholder protection law in China will find it a valuable vademecum.’ -- David Milman, Lancaster University, UK‘This fascinating new book by Professor Jingchen Zhao provides a distinctive, ambitious, and eminently rigorous study of derivative actions and corporate governance in China. The treatment of the subject area is significant, original, and a compelling read. Insightful and timely, it is a must-read for academic company lawyers across the world and should be on the reading list for any company law practitioners, fund managers, and entrepreneurs, and any postgraduate course on company law.’ -- Wangwei Lin, University of Reading, UK‘Derivative actions are potentially powerful weapons; much has been written about them but there has not been a really comprehensive study of them in China, and yet they are prospectively of great importance. In this work, and employing several pertinent research methods, Professor Zhao engages in a very extensive critical analysis of derivative actions in China and in the broader context of corporate governance that is most admirable and robust. Furthermore the study is very impressively sourced and clearly written.’ -- Andrew Keay, University of Leeds, UKTable of ContentsContents: 1. Introduction to derivative actions and corporate governance in China 2. The regulatory framework and development trajectory of derivative actions in China 3. Corporate governance in China 4. Effectiveness and efficiency of derivative action under a unique Chinese corporate governance regime: Incentives, accessibility and eligibility 5. Funding derivative actions and incentives to commence litigation 6. Trends and developments in Chinese Company Law: The application of the derivative action scheme in the past 14 years 7. Synchronising norms and institutions – towards a more effective, balanced and accessible settings of derivative action scheme in China 8. Conclusion to derivative actions and corporate governance in China Index
£104.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Reframing Corporate Governance: Company Law
Book SynopsisThis stimulating book offers an astute analysis of corporate governance from both a historical and a philosophical point of view. Exploring how the modern corporation developed, from Ancient Rome and the Middle Ages up to the present day, Javier Reyes identifies the strengths and weaknesses of the mainstream theory of the firm as put forward by the law and economics school of thought. Demystifying the scientific aspirations of neoclassical economics as understood and used by legal scholars, this book offers readers the foundations on which to build their own conception of what corporations are and should be. Reyes argues that by belonging to political philosophy, corporate governance is essentially political, and thus requires a multidisciplinary approach for its study and practice. Reframing Corporate Governance will be essential reading for academics and students of company law and corporate governance, especially those interested in entrepreneurship, radical democracy, evolutionary approaches to legal theory and business anthropology. Those interested in corporate social responsibility, business and management, and philosophy will also find this a valuable read.Trade Review'As Javier Reyes points out, ''The corporation may not be a mystery of eternity or life, but it is a window into the big questions of human nature.'' The author of this book depicts an impressive historical timeline from Ancient Rome to this day. Each page of the book portrays the author's vast knowledge, whether it is about organizational theory, economic history, philosophy, psychology or legal history. However, Reyes' book manages to avoid any academic dreariness. Reyes draws a set of guidelines for a new type of a general theory, without trying to offer ultimate truths. He is an excellent pedagogue putting forth the right questions and thus allowing the reader to come up with the answers by himself. During my university years, books of this quality were scarce.' --Wille Rydman, MP, Finnish Parliament'Javier Reyes offers new scholarly and theoretical perspectives on corporate law and governance. He seeks to reframe our thinking by exposing political and ideological features of mainstream law and economics and their effects on corporate governance thinking. This impressive book provides new analytical tools and is essential reading for corporate lawyers.' --Roman Tomasic, University of South AustraliaTable of ContentsContents: Foreword Introduction 1. The disnature of the firm: how did we end up here? 2. Do not trust anyone who tells you it is the end of history 3. The firm and its discontents 4. Agency and the emperor’s new clothes 5. Notes on an alternative corporate law theory Conclusions Index
£106.58
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Economics of Corporate Law
Book SynopsisScholarly analysis of corporate law in the United States has come to be dominated by an economic approach. Professor Hill and Professor McDonnell here draw together seminal articles which represent major milestones along the road that economics has traveled in coming to play this central role in corporate law scholarship. The focus is on the analysis of corporate law, drawing mainly upon legal scholarship and particularly on US scholarship, which is the originator of the application of modern economic analysis to corporate law and has had much influence in other countries.Beginning with several of the key works on the economics of the firm which have most heavily influenced legal scholarship, the title explores the central legal role of the board of directors and state competition for corporate charters. It further considers the role of hostile takeovers and board defenses against them and the effectiveness of shareholder suits and other agency mechanisms.31 articles, dating from 1931 to 2006Contributors include: L.A. Bebchuk, A.A. Berle, Jr., B.S. Black, H. Hansmann, R. Kraakman, H. Manne, M.J. Roe, R. Romano, O. WilliamsonTable of ContentsContents: Introduction Claire A. Hill and Brett McDonnell PART I ECONOMICS OF THE FIRM 1. Ronald Coase (1937), ‘The Nature of the Firm’, Economica, 4, 386–405 2. Michael C. Jensen and William H. Meckling (1976), ‘Theory of the Firm: Managerial Behavior, Agency Costs and Ownership Structure’, Journal of Financial Economics, 3 (4), October, 305–60 3. Oliver Williamson (1984), ‘Corporate Governance’, Yale Law Journal, 93 (7), June, 1197–230 PART II THE BOARD AND PURPOSE 4. A.A. Berle, Jr. (1931), ‘Corporate Powers as Powers in Trust’, Harvard Law Review, XLIV (7), May, 1049–74 5. E. Merrick Dodd, Jr. (1932), ‘For Whom are Corporate Managers Trustees?’, Harvard Law Review, XLV (7), May, 1145–63 6. Stephen M. Bainbridge (2003), ‘Director Primacy: The Means and Ends of Corporate Governance’, Northwestern University Law Review, 97 (2), 547–606 7. Margaret M. Blair and Lynn A. Stout (1999), ‘A Team Production Theory of Corporate Law’, Virginia Law Review, 85 (2), March, 247–328 8. Sanjai Bhagat and Bernard Black (1999), ‘The Uncertain Relationship Between Board Composition and Firm Performance’, Business Lawyer, 54 (3), May, 921–63 9. Donald C. Langevoort (2001), ‘The Human Nature of Corporate Boards: Law, Norms, and the Unintended Consequences of Independence and Accountability’, Georgetown Law Journal, 89, 797–832 PART III STATE COMPETITION 10. William L. Cary (1974), ‘Federalism and Corporate Law: Reflections Upon Delaware’, Yale Law Journal, 83 (4), March, 663–705 11. Ralph K. Winter, Jr. (1977), ‘State Law, Shareholder Protection, and the Theory of the Corporation’, Journal of Legal Studies, 6 (2), June, 251–92 12. Roberta Romano (1985), ‘Law as a Product: Some Pieces of the Incorporation Puzzle’, Journal of Law, Economics, and Organization, 1 (2), Fall, 225–83 13. Bernard S. Black (1990), ‘Is Corporate Law Trivial?: A Political and Economic Analysis’, Northwestern University Law Review, 84 (2), 542–97 14. Robert Daines (2001), ‘Does Delaware Law Improve Firm Value?’, Journal of Financial Economics, 62 (3), December, 525–58 15. Ehud Kamar (1998), ‘A Regulatory Competition Theory of Indeterminacy in Corporate Law’, Columbia Law Review, 98 (8), December, 1908–59 16. Mark J. Roe (2003), ‘Delaware’s Competition’, Harvard Law Review, 117 (2), December, 588–646 Volume II An introduction to both volumes by the editors appears in Volume I PART 1 TAKEOVERS AND TAKEOVER DEFENCES 1. Henry G. Manne (1965), ‘Mergers and the Market for Corporate Control’, Journal of Political Economy, 73 (2), April, 110–20 2. Frank H. Easterbrook and Daniel R. Fischel (1981), ‘The Proper Role of a Target’s Management in Responding to a Tender Offer’, Harvard Law Review, 94 (6), April, 1161–204 3. Ronald J. Gilson and Reinier Kraakman (1989), ‘Delaware’s Intermediate Standard for Defensive Tactics: Is There Substance to Proportionality Review?’, Business Lawyer, 44 (2), February, 247–74 4. Jeffrey N. Gordon (1997), ‘”Just Say Never?” Poison Pills, Deadhand Pills, and Shareholder-Adopted Bylaws: An Essay for Warren Buffett’, Cardozo Law Review, 19 (1–2), September–November, 511–52 5. Lucian Arye Bebchuk, John C. Coates IV and Guhan Subramanian (2002), ‘The Powerful Antitakeover Force of Staggered Boards: Theory, Evidence, and Policy’, Stanford Law Review, 54 (5), May, 887–951 PART II SHAREHOLDER SUITS AND OTHER AGENCY MECHANISMS 6. Janet Cooper Alexander (1991), ‘Do the Merits Matter? A Study of Settlements in Securities Class Actions’, Stanford Law Review, 43 (3), February, 497–598 7. Melvin Aron Eisenberg (1993), ‘The Divergence of Standards of Conduct and Standards of Review in Corporate Law’, Fordham Law Review, 62 (3), 437–68 8. Edward B. Rock (1997), ‘Saints and Sinners: How Does Delaware Corporate Law Work?’, UCLA Law Review, 44, 1009–107 9. Bernard Black, Brian Cheffins and Michael Klausner (2006), ‘Outside Director Liability’, Stanford Law Review, 58 (4), February, 1055–159 10. Lucian Arye Bebchuk, Jesse M. Fried and David I. Walker (2002), ‘Managerial Power and Rent Extraction in the Design of Executive Compensation’, University of Chicago Law Review, 69, 751–846 11. John C. Coffee, Jr. (2002), ‘Understanding Enron: “It’s About the Gatekeepers, Stupid”’, Business Lawyer, 57 (4), August, 1403–420 12. Tom Baker and Sean J. Griffith (2006), ‘The Missing Monitor in Corporate Governance: The Directors’ and Officers’ Liability Insurer’, Georgetown Law Journal, 95, 1795–842 PART III OTHER PERSPECTIVES 13. Mark J. Roe (1991), ‘A Political Theory of American Corporate Finance’, Columbia Law Review, 91, 10–67 14. Henry Hansmann and Reinier Kraakman (2001), ‘The End of History for Corporate Law’, Georgetown Law Journal, 89 (2), June, 439–68 15. Henry Hansmann and Reinier Kraakman (2000), ‘The Essential Role of Organizational Law’, Yale Law Journal, 110 (3), December, 387–440 Index
£682.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd The Company Share: Legal Regulation and Public
Book SynopsisThe legal regulation of company shares is a fundamental building block in a capitalist society. This insightful book provides an historical analysis of the phenomenon, investigating underlying policy issues and considering relevant aspects of current law to explore possible future trends. David Milman examines the phenomenon of the company share in a holistic way, tracing the origins of the share and exploring the diversity present within the family of shares. Using a comparative approach, key chapters consider the circumstances under which shares are acquired, the property law perspective relevant to shares and the rights and obligations of those who hold shares. The book concludes with speculation on how the share might evolve in the future in light of technological change and the development of other capital raising investments. This accessible book will provide valuable insight to scholars researching corporate law. It will also be beneficial for policymakers and practitioners wishing to understand more about the history of the company share, and how this may impact its future.Trade Review'This book provides a distinctive and welcome contribution to literature on the changing patterns of regulatory framework in relation to shares and shareholder rights in the UK. The coherent argument and clear writing of the author makes this an appropriate book for corporate law and corporate finance courses. Insightful and timely, it is a must-read for academics, practitioners, investors, fund managers, entrepreneurs, as well as business and finance professionals.' --Jingchen Zhao, Nottingham Trent University, UK'This fascinating new book by David Milman is highly informative and interesting. Written in a lively and entertaining style, the book contains a wealth of historical detail as well as many topical allusions. It traces how legal and legislative policy in respect of shares and share capital has waxed and waned over the years and how previously discarded solutions have once again gained in popularity. The book comes highly recommended for its sheer readability and incisive analysis.' --Gerard McCormack, University of Leeds, UK'Professor Milman provides a must-read work of immense scholarship on shares, and provides a work of immense scholarship. The book provides is a modern and thorough exposition of the development of shares as a critical intangible asset. A comparative approach enhances the analysis of the work. The changing role of shares and shareholder regulation is examined with clarity of style. The cultural and political ramifications of shares are examined, as well as the impact of Brexit. This book is clear, comprehensive and a must read for students, academics, and practitioners who seek a work of scholarship.' --Anu Arora, University of Liverpool, UKTable of ContentsContents: Preface 1. Introduction to the Institution of The Company Share 2. History of the Company Share and the Different Categories of Share 3. Acquisition of Shares 4. Shares as Property Objects 5. Shareholder Rights: Source, Nature and Enforceability 6. Obligations Associated with Share Ownership 7. Overview and the Future of the Share Index
£106.58
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Changing Sustainability Norms through
Book SynopsisApplying the emergent Business and Human Rights (BHR) regime as a case, this book analyses regulatory strategies, communicative approaches and public-private processes to develop new sustainability-related norms, particularly for business, for maintaining and promoting public policy objectives and societal needs. Karin Buhmann sets out the concerns of public regulators and businesses that both inform debates and create power struggles in the construction of sustainability norms between public policy interests and the market. The author focuses on three trends in argumentative strategies applied in the BHR context and considers the use, impact and complementarity of these for sustainability regulation. Through analysis of selected transnational regulatory processes, the book identifies argumentative and negotiation strategies that led to agreement on BHR despite conflicting interests across public, private and not-for-profit (NGO) stakeholders, and develops insights for future multi-stakeholder sustainability regulation, focusing both on the regulatory process and the outcome. Changing Sustainability Norms through Communication Processes will be a valuable read for NGOs, regulators, managers and academics with a concern for sustainability regulation by helping to enhance their understanding of how to influence normative change in organisations, in support of sustainability and responsible business conduct.Trade Review'This book provides useful new narratives with which to explain the evolution of soft law within the interconnected fields of business and human rights and corporate sustainability. It helps situate these developments within the overall frames of international law and socio-legal studies, not merely for the academy and for theory's sake, but also to guide the wide range of societal actors, including sustainability champions inside companies, seeking to use norms to help change the practices of corporations to be more responsible and sustainable.' --Ursula Wynhoven, Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights (on staff loan from the UN Global Compact)Table of ContentsContents: Part I Setting the Stage 1. Introduction 2. The Context: The CSR Discourse and its Relation to Law, Human Rights and Social Sustainability 3. Argumentative Strategies, Discourse and System-Specific Rationality Part II Discursive Construction of Business Responsibilities for CSR 4. Two Steps Forward, One Back – More Than Once: Developing Normative Guidance for Business on Human Rights in a CSR Context 5. From Incremental Steps to Emerging Regime Part III Arguing for Change 6. Argumentative Strategies 7. Conclusion Index
£122.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Corporate Accountability: The Role and Impact of
Book SynopsisWhilst many of us would agree that human rights are more important than corporate profits, the reality is often different; such realities as child labour and environmental destruction caused by corporate activities make this patently clear. Recognising that balancing human rights and business interests can be problematic, Corporate Accountability considers the limits of existing complaint mechanisms and examines non-judicial alternatives for conflict resolution.The innovative approach herein compiles both long-standing international expertise and findings based on 25 key interviews from experts and victims. In contrast to the current literature, which tends to provide details on the functioning of the mechanisms, this book delves further to examine the strengths and weaknesses of each mechanism and provides criteria of excellence for non-judicial grievance mechanisms. In doing so, it provides a reality-check for corporate accountability worldwide.Novel and thought provoking, Corporate Accountability will be a captivating read for academics as well as companies interested in human rights and corporate social responsibility. It will also prove of interest to related state institutions such as development agencies and other relevant ministries such as chambers of commerce, trade unions, NGOs and civil society organisations.Trade Review‘The book will be very useful for lawyers, academics, companies and for those who have an interest in business and human rights.’ -- Manoj Kumar Sinha, Business and Human Rights JournalTable of ContentsContents: PART I: Introduction 1. Introduction and methodology PART II: Grievance Mechanisms 2. International Mechanisms 3. Multi-stakeholder Mechanisms 4. Company Mechanisms PART III: Conclusions 5. Conclusions and criteria of excellencyBibliography Appendices Index
£134.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Innovations in Corporate Governance: Global
Book SynopsisThe world is changing. After old certainties were swept away by the Financial Crisis of 2008-09, states are grappling with the implications of new thinking about the role and nature of corporations and how they should be regulated. This timely book brings together the contributions of leading scholars from around the world to highlight and provide critical analysis of developments and trends in corporate governance in a range of jurisdictions, both mature and developing.The diverse subjects covered in the book include shareholder protection in Delaware, trends in the governance of state-owned enterprises in China, say on pay in the Netherlands, board committees in the UK, and stakeholder governance in Germany. The book also includes theoretical perspectives, including one chapter arguing against the notions of shareholder primacy that underpin Anglo-American corporate law. The final section presents two chapters on the governance of banks, reflecting the contemporary importance of financial institutions.Innovations in Corporate Governance offers an essential global perspective on corporate governance that will be of interest to students and academics in the field, as well as professionals, policy makers and those working in regulatory agencies around the world. Contributors include: F.A. Gevurtz, B. Haar, B. Hanningan, G.E. Henderson, L.-W. Lin, M. Marin, C. Van der Elst, S. WatsonTable of ContentsContents: 1. Introduction Susan Watson and P.M. Vasudev PART I PERSPECTIVES ON CORPORATE GOVERNANCE 2. Globalizing up corporate law Franklin A. Gevurtz 3. China’s national champions: governance change through globalization? Li-Wen Lin 4. The taxonomy of the modern company Susan Watson PART II REGULATORY TECHNIQUES 5. Corporate governance codes as regulatory tools to advance stakeholder concerns in the corporation Brigitte Haar 6. Empire-building: the rise of the audit committee Brenda Hannigan 7. Answering the say for no pay Christoph Van der Elst PART III GOVERNANCE IN BANKS 8. Banks, corporate governance and the public interest: the potential role of public interest directors Gail E. Henderson 9. Organisational form and financial stability: lessons from cooperative banks in the US and UK Michael Marin Index
£100.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Corporate Social Responsibility: Perspectives for
Book SynopsisCorporate social responsibility (CSR) is setting new missions for companies and shining a welcome light on issues such as the behaviour of board members, shared value, the well-being of stakeholders, the protection of vulnerable individuals and the roles played by public opinion and shareholders. This timely book seeks to lay the foundations for a sustainable corporate governance based on the European Commission definition of CSR as 'the responsibility of enterprises for their impacts on society'. More generally, this sustainable corporate governance responds to some of the pressing challenges of the 21st century, from sustainable finance and climate change to carbon reduction and population growth.The book offers a comprehensive theoretical and educational approach to CSR, with references to key international, European and national texts on this subject. It is written largely from a European and French perspective, but draws comparisons with the United Kingdom and United States. The close relationship between the demands of energy transition and corporate governance and the role of Social Responsibility Investment (SRI) and its relationship with CSR are covered in depth. In addition, the notion of a 'stakeholder', as well as changes in our understanding of this term and its impact on corporate governance, is explored in detail. This significant book offers a theoretical and dynamic approach to CSR, adopting a holistic vision that is both practical and forward-looking. Providing a wealth of reference material and highlighting areas for future research, it is an ideal tool for both students and academics studying CSR.Trade Review'Professor Catherine Malecki is one of the finest French specialists of corporate social responsibility and sustainable development. Her renowned works have contributed to our awareness of the importance and diversity of the norms already existing in that domain, whether from national legislations, European directives or international sources. However, the author does not aim at merely depicting what is already existing, but rather at identifying the requirements and conditions of sustainable development in which enterprises play a leading role.' --Alain Couret, Universite Paris 1 Pantheon-Sorbonne, France'In this timely work, Professor Catherine Malecki provides some thought-provoking insights into the development of corporate social responsibility (CSR). Primarily focussing on France, Professor Malecki also draws on the relevance of international developments and frameworks in her exposition. Given the fundamental importance of CSR as a component of corporate governance, and the relevance of CSR for all business organisations, I highly recommend this book to all those with an interest in CSR and its role in sustainable corporate governance.' --Chris Mallin, Norwich Business School, UK'This highly readable and illuminating book is a welcome addition to the still relatively sparse literature on the legal aspects of Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR). The main question raised at the outset, whether CSR constitutes a new branch of law, together with the multiple questions on the origins, sources, development and path CSR is taking, are beautifully unpicked in a stimulating manner, through the French Law lens, coupled with EU and international perspectives at appropriate junctions, to reveal a complex, yet fascinating and, at times, contradictory, area of law. It is a magnificent teaching resource and a helpful reference for the scholar.' --Arad Reisberg, Brunel University London, UKTable of ContentsContents: Foreword General Introduction Part 1 The issues of non-financial reporting 1. Review of Questions 2. Developments in Non-Financial Reporting 3. Non-Financial Information Requirements 4. A Sustainable Accounting System Part 2 Behaviours and sanctions 5. Review of Questions A. Behaviours 6. Corporate Administration and Management 7. What Guides or Labels for Socially Responsible Behaviour? 8. Dialogue with Stakeholders 9. Corporate Transactions 10. What other Paths or Avenues for Investigation Exist? B. What Sanctions? General Presentation 11. Diversity of Traditional Sanctions 12. Reputation 13. A Special Sanction: Environmental Liability in Groups of Companies Part 3 Sustainable Finance, Responsible Investors 14. Review of Questions 15. General Overview of Socially Responsible Investment 16. Towards Responsible Investors 17. Sustainable Finance Projects Conclusion Index
£144.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Agency and Partnership Law
Book SynopsisThis magisterial research review presents and analyses the leading academic articles on agency law and partnership law, both classic and contemporary. The review begins by focusing on topics such as the fundamental concepts of agency law, the fiduciary duties of agents, indemnification, vicarious liability and notice. It moves on to discussion of several important issues relating to partnership law, such as statutory development and reform, the entity-aggregate debate and single-person partnership. This study provides a comprehensive overview of the most significant matters in the fields of agency and partnership law and will serve as a valuable tool for scholars and practitioners alike.Trade Review‘Mark Loewenstein and Robert Hillman, who are themselves highly knowledgeable and widely respected scholars of agency and partnership law, have done a great service by assembling a collection of leading articles by giants of the field. Many of these articles were game changers, shifting the law in important ways. All of them reward close reading by anyone seeking to build their knowledge of this important area of the law.’Table of ContentsContents: Acknowledgements Introduction Mark J. Loewenstein and Robert W. Hillman AGENCY PART I FUNDAMENTAL CONCEPTS 1. O. W. Holmes, Jr. (1891), ‘Agency’, Harvard Law Review, IV (8), March, 345–64 2. Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. (1891), ‘Agency II’, Harvard Law Review, V (1), April, 1–23 3. John H. Wigmore (1894), ‘Responsibility for Tortious Acts: Its History’, Harvard Law Review, VII (6), January, 315–37 4. John H. Wigmore (1894), ‘Responsibility for Tortious Acts: Its History – II: Harm Done by Servants and other Agents: 1300–1850’, Harvard Law Review, VII (7), February, 383–405 PART II THE AGENCY RELATIONSHIP IN IMPORTANT CONTEXTS 5. J. Dennis Hynes (1991), ‘Lender Liability: The Dilemma of the Controlling Creditor’, Tennessee Law Review, 58, Summer, 635–68 6. Lyman P. Q. Johnson and David Millon (2005), ‘Recalling Why Corporate Officers Are Fiduciaries’, William and Mary Law Review, 46 (5), 1597–653 7. Grace M. Giesel (2007), ‘Client Responsibility for Lawyer Conduct: Examining the Agency Nature of the Lawyer-Client Relationship’, Nebraska Law Review, 86 (2), 346–95 8. Donald C. Langevoort (2003), ‘Agency Law Inside the Corporation: Problems of Candor and Knowledge’, University of Cincinnati Law Review, 71 (4), Summer, 1187–231 9. Jill E. Fisch and Hillary A. Sale (2003), ‘The Securities Analyst as Agent: Rethinking the Regulation of Analysts’, Iowa Law Review, 88, 1035–98 10. Anthony J. Bellia Jr. (2001), ‘Contracting with Electronic Agents’, Emory Law Journal, 50, 1047–92 PART III THE AGENT’S FIDUCIARY DUTIES 11. Austin W. Scott (1949), ‘The Fiduciary Principle’, California Law Review, 37 (4), December, 539–55 12. Robert Cooter and Bradley J. Freedman (1991), ‘The Fiduciary Relationship: Its Economic Character and Legal Consequences’, New York University Law Review, 66, October, 1045–75 13. Deborah A. DeMott (1988), ‘Beyond Metaphor: An Analysis of Fiduciary Obligation’, Duke Law Journal, 1988, 879–924 14. Tamar Frankel (1983), ‘Fiduciary Law’, California Law Review, 71 (3), May, 795–836 15. Deborah A. DeMott (2014), ‘The Fiduciary Character of Agency and the Interpretation of Instructions’, in Andrew S. Gold and Paul B. Miller (eds), Philosophical Foundations of Fiduciary Law, Part IV, Chapter 16, New York, NY, USA: Oxford University Press, 321–38 PART IV INDEMNIFICATION 16. Roscoe Steffen (1958), ‘The Employer’s “Indemnity” Action’, University of Chicago Law Review, 25 (3), Spring, 465–94 17. Glanville Williams (1957), ‘Vicarious Liability and the Master’s Indemnity’, Modern Law Review, 20 (3), May, 220–35 18. Glanville Williams (1957), ‘Vicarious Liability and the Master’s Indemnity, Continued’, Modern Law Review, 20 (5), September, 437–46 PART V VICARIOUS LIABILITY 19. Gary T. Schwartz (1996), ‘The Hidden and Fundamental Issue of Employer Vicarious Liability’, Southern California Law Review, 69, 1739–67 20. Alan O. Sykes (1988), ‘The Boundaries of Vicarious Liability: An Economic Analysis of the Scope of Employment Rule and Related Legal Doctrines’, Harvard Law Review, 101 (3), January, 563–609 21. B. Glenn George (1999), ‘Employer Liability for Sexual Harassment: The Buck Stops Where?’, Wake Forest Law Review, 34 (1), 1–25 PART VI UNDISCLOSED PRINCIPAL DOCTRINE 22. Floyd R. Mechem (1910), ‘The Liability of an Undisclosed Principal I’, Harvard Law Review, 23 (7), May, 513–30 23. Floyd R. Mechem (1910), ‘The Liability of an Undisclosed Principal II’, Harvard Law Review, 23 (8), June, 590–602 24. James Barr Ames (1909), ‘Undisclosed Principal – His Rights and Liabilities’, Yale Law Journal, XVIII (7), May, 443–53 25. Mark A. Sargent and Arnold Rochvarg (1982), ‘A Reexamination of the Agency Doctrine of Election’, University of Miami Law Review, 36 (3), 411–37 26. Randy E. Barnett (1987), ‘Squaring Undisclosed Agency Law with Contract Theory’, California Law Review, 75 (6), December, 1969–2003 PART VII NOTICE, KNOWLEDGE AND IMPUTATION 27. Warren A. Seavey (1916), ‘Notice through an Agent’, University of Pennsylvania Law Review and American Law Register, 65 (1), November, 1–38 28. Maurice H. Merrill (1936), ‘Unforgettable Knowledge: A Study in the Law of Notice’, Michigan Law Review, 34 (4), February, 474–93 29. Mark J. Loewenstein (2013), ‘Imputation, the Adverse Interest Exception, and the Curious Case of the Restatement (Third) of Agency’, University of Colorado Law Review, 84 (2), 305–66 Volume II Contents: Introduction An introduction to all three volumes by the editors appears in Volume I AGENCY PART VIII AGENCY COST THEORY 1. Samuel Issacharoff and Daniel R. Ortiz (1999), ‘Governing through Intermediaries’, Virginia Law Review, Symposium: The Law and Economics of Elections, 85 (8), November, 1627–70 2. Douglas G. Baird (1991), ‘Fraudulent Conveyances, Agency Costs, and Leveraged Buyouts’, Journal of Legal Studies, XX (1), January, 1–24 PART IX AN AGENT’S AUTHORITY 3. Gregory Scott Crespi (2005), ‘The Proposed Abolition of Inherent Agency Authority by the Restatement (Third) of Agency: An Incomplete Solution’, Santa Clara Law Review, 45 (2), 337–82 4. Deborah A. DeMott (2014), ‘The Contours and Composition of Agency Doctrine: Perspectives from History and Theory on Inherent Agency Power’, University of Illinois Law Review, 2014 (5), 1813–33 PART X ECONOMIC ANALYSIS 5. Eric Rasmusen (2004), ‘Agency Law and Contract Formation’, American Law and Economics Review, 6 (2), Fall, 369–409 6. Lewis A. Kornhauser (1982), ‘An Economic Analysis of the Choice Between Enterprise and Personal Liability for Accidents’, California Law Review, 70 (6), December, 1345–92 PART XI INDEPENDENT CONTRACTORS 7. Benjamin Means and Joseph A. Seiner (2016), ‘Navigating the Uber Economy’, University of California, Davis Law Review, 49 (4), April, 1511– 46 8. Roscoe T. Steffen (1935), ‘Independent Contractor and the Good Life’, University of Chicago Law Review, 2 (4), June, 501–32 PARTNERSHIP PART I STATUTORY DEVELOPMENT AND REFORM: THE UNIFORM PARTNERSHIP ACTS (UPA AND RUPA) 9. William Draper Lewis (1915), ‘The Uniform Partnership Act’, Yale Law Journal, XXIV (8), June, 617–41 10. Judson A. Crane (1915), ‘The Uniform Partnership Act: A Criticism’, Harvard Law Review, 28 (8), June, 762–89 11. William Draper Lewis (1915), ‘The Uniform Partnership Act – A Reply to Mr. Crane’s Criticism’, Harvard Law Review, 29 (2), December, 158–92 12. Donald J. Weidner and John W. Larson (1993), ‘The Revised Uniform Partnership Act: The Reporters’ Overview’, Business Lawyer, 49 (1), November, 1–44 13. Larry E. Ribstein (1993), ‘The Revised Uniform Partnership Act: Not Ready for Prime Time’, Business Lawyer, 49 (1), November, 45–82 PART II THE ENTITY-AGGREGATE DEBATE 14. Gary S. Rosin (1989), ‘The Entity-Aggregate Dispute: Conceptualism and Functionalism in Partnership Law’, Arkansas Law Review, 42, 395–466 PART III SINGLE PERSON PARTNERSHIP 15. Robert W. Hillman and Donald J. Weidner (2012), ‘Partners without Partners: The Legal Status of Single Person Partnerships’, Fordham Journal of Corporate and Financial Law, XVII (2), 449–73 PART IV RELATIONSHIPS AMONG PARTNERS: CONTRACTS AND FIDUCIARY STATUS 16. Allan W. Vestal (1993), ‘Fundamental Contractarian Error in the Revised Uniform Partnership Act of 1992’, Boston University Law Review, 73 (4), September, 523–79 17. J. Dennis Hynes (1997), ‘Freedom of Contract, Fiduciary Duties, and Partnerships: The Bargain Principle and the Law of Agency’, Washington and Lee Law Review, 54 (2), 439–64 18. Robert W. Hillman (1987), ‘Private Ordering Within Partnerships’, University of Miami Law Review, 41 (3), January, 425–71 19. Larry E. Ribstein (2005), ‘Are Partners Fiduciaries?’, University of Illinois Law Review, 2005 (1), 209–51 20. Claire Moore Dickerson (1993), ‘Is it Appropriate to Appropriate Corporate Concepts: Fiduciary Duties and the Revised Uniform Partnership Act’, University of Colorado Law Review, 64, 111–57 21. Paul Gompers and Josh Lerner (1996), ‘The Use of Covenants: An Empirical Analysis of Venture Partnership Agreements’, Journal of Law and Economics, XXXIX (2), October, 463–98 22. Rutheford B. Campbell, Jr. (2007–2008), ‘Bumping Along the Bottom: Abandoned Principles and Failed Fiduciary Standards in Uniform Partnership and LLC Statutes’, Kentucky Law Journal, 96 (2), 163–95 23. J. William Callison (1997), ‘Blind Men and Elephants: Fiduciary Duties under the Revised Uniform Partnership Act, Uniform Limited Liability Company Act, and Beyond’, Journal of Small and Emerging Business Law, 1 (1), Spring, 109–64 24. Myron T. Steele (2007), ‘Judicial Scrutiny of Fiduciary Duties in Delaware Limited Partnerships and Limited Liability Companies’, Delaware Journal of Corporate Law, 32 (1), 1–32 Volume III Contents: Acknowledgements Introduction An introduction to all three volumes by the editors appears in Volume I PARTNERSHIP PART V PARTNERSHIP PROPERTY 1. Edward S. Merrill (1993), ‘Partnership Property and Partnership Authority Under the Revised Uniform Partnership Act’, Business Lawyer, 49 (1), November, 83–105 PART VI LIMITED LIABILITY 2. Alan L. Feld (1969), ‘The “Control” Test for Limited Partnerships’, Harvard Law Review, 82 (7), May, 1471–84 3. Larry E. Ribstein (1992), ‘The Deregulation of Limited Liability and the Death of Partnership’, Washington University Law Quarterly: Symposium on Corporate Law and Finance, 70 (2), January, 417–75 4. Robert W. Hillman (1992), ‘Limited Liability and Externalization of Risk: A Comment on the Death of Partnership’, Washington University Law Quarterly: Symposium on Corporate Law and Finance, 70 (2), January, 477–87 5. Robert R. Keatinge, Allan G. Donn, George W. Coleman and Elizabeth G. Hester (1995), ‘Limited Liability Partnerships: The Next Step in the Evolution of the Unincorporated Business Organization’, Business Lawyer, 51 (1), November, 147–207 6. Robert W. Hamilton (1995), ‘Registered Limited Liability Partnerships: Present at the Birth (Nearly)’, University of Colorado Law Review, 66, 1065–103 PART VII DISSOLUTION AND BANKRUPTCY 7. Alan R. Bromberg (1965), ‘Partnership Dissolution – Causes, Consequences, and Cures’, Texas Law Review, 43, 631–68 8. Christine Hurt (2015), ‘The Limited Liability Partnership in Bankruptcy’, American Bankruptcy Law Journal, 89 (4), Fall, 567–606 PART VIII THE CHANGING NATURE OF PARTNERSHIP 9. Robert W. Hillman (2005), ‘Law, Culture, and the Lore of Partnership: Of Entrepreneurs, Accountability, and the Evolving Status of Partners’, Wake Forest Law Review, 40 (3), Fall, 793–825 PART IX PARTNERSHIP LAW AND THE PROFESSIONAL SERVICES FIRM 10. Serena L. Kafker (1993), ‘Golden Handcuffs: Enforceability of Non-Competition Clauses in Professional Partnership Agreements of Accountants, Physicians, and Attorneys’, American Business Law Journal, 31 (1), May, 31–58 11. Ronald J. Gilson and Robert H. Mnookin (1985), ‘Sharing Among the Human Capitalists: An Economic Inquiry into the Corporate Law Firm and How Partners Split Profits’, Stanford Law Review: Symposium on the Law Firm as a Social Institution, 37 (2), January, 313–92 12. Robert W. Hillman (1988), ‘Law Firms and Their Partners: The Law and Ethics of Grabbing and Leaving’, Texas Law Review, 67 (1), November, 1–61 13. Jennifer J. Johnson (1995), ‘Limited Liability for Lawyers: General Partners Need Not Apply’, Business Lawyer, 51 (1), November, 85–145 14. Susan Saab Fortney (1998), ‘Professional Responsibility and Liability Issues Related to Limited Liability Law Partnerships’, South Texas Law Review, 39 (2), 399–444 15. Douglas R. Richmond (2010), ‘The Partnership Paradigm and Law Firm Non-equity Partners’, Kansas Law Review, 58 (3), 507–51 Index
£928.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Research Handbook on Representative Shareholder
Book SynopsisWritten by leading scholars and judges, the Research Handbook on Representative Shareholder Litigation is a modern-day survey of the state of this essential field. The book is an important and timely contribution by leading corporate law scholars, judges, and practitioners, seeking to better understand and explain the proliferation of shareholder litigation across the globe. It provides a cross-jurisdictional survey of litigation and empirical evidence on the recent evolution of these lawsuits, including in-depth analyses of several key forms of shareholder litigation. Its chapters cover securities class actions, merger litigation, derivative suits, and appraisal litigation, as well as other forms of shareholder litigation. Through in-depth analysis of these different forms of litigation, the book explores the agency costs inherent in representative litigation, the challenges of multijurisdictional litigation and disclosure-only settlements, and the rise of institutional investors. It also surveys how related issues are addressed across the globe, with a special focus on parallel forms of litigation in the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, the European Union, Israel and China. This Handbook will be an invaluable resource on this important topic for scholars of corporate law, practitioners, judges and legislators.Contributors include: D. Awrey, A. Badawi, R.A. Booth, E.A. Chiappinelli, S.J. Choi, B. Clarke, J.C. Coffee, Jr., J.D. Cox, J. Erikcson, J.J. Fedechko, J.E. Fisch, J.L. Gale, M. Gargantini, M. Gelter, S. Griffith, L.A. Hamermesh, S. Hannes, E. Kamar, C.R. Korsmo, J.T. Laster, A.M. Lipton, M. Myers, J.J. Park, A.C. Pritchard, P. Puri, A. Rickey, R. Ronnen, A.M. Rose, C. Silver, S.D. Solomon, R.S. Thomas, D. Webber, V. Winship, M. Wischmeier Shaner, C. XiTable of ContentsContents: Part I Securities Class Actions 1. The Development of Securities Litigation as a Lawmaking Partnership Jill E. Fisch 2. Securities Class Actions and Severe Frauds James J. Park 3. The Shifting Raison d’être of the Rule 10b-5 Private Right of Action Amanda Marie Rose, Part II Shareholder Derivative Suits 4. The (Un)Changing Derivative Suit Jessica Erickson 5. Claim Character and Class Conflict in Securities Litigation Richard A. Booth 6. Illegality and the Business Judgment Rule Charles R. Korsmo Part III Merger Litigation a. Managing Multijurisdictional Litigation 7. Fighting Frivolous Litigation in a Multijurisdictional World Adam Badawi 8. Addressing the “Baseless” Shareholder Suit: Mechanisms and Consequences James D. Cox 9. Who Collects the Deal Tax, Where, and What Delaware Can Do About It Sean J. Griffith and Anthony Rickey 10. Forum Shopping in the Bargain Aisle: Wal-Mart and the Role of Adequacy of Representation in Shareholder Litigation Lawrence A. Hamermesh and Jacob J. Fedechko 11. Limiting Litigation Through Corporate Governance Documents Ann M. Lipton b. Judicial Perspectives on Shareholder Litigation 12. Disclosure Settlements in the State Courts Post-Trulia: Practical Considerations James L. Gale 13. Changing Attitudes: The Stark Results of Thirty Years of Evolution in Delaware M&A Litigation J. Travis Laster 14. Appraisal Rights in Complete Tender Offers in Israel—A Look into Israeli Case-law Ruth Ronnen c. Appraisal Actions 15. Recent Developments in Stockholder Appraisal Charles R. Korsmo and Minor Myers 16. Appraisal as Representative Litigation Minor Myers Part IV Litigants and Lawfirms a. Plaintiffs and Lawfirms 17. Lead Plaintiffs and Their Lawyers: Mission Accomplished, or More to Be Done? Stephen J. Choi and A.C. Pritchard 18. The Mimic-the-Market Method of Regulating Common Fund Fee Awards: A Status Report on Securities Fraud Class Actions Charles Silver 19. What Do We Know About Law Firm Quality In M&A Litigation? Steven Davidoff Solomon and Randall S. Thomas b. Officers and Directors 20. Jurisdiction Over Directors and Officers in Delaware Eric A. Chiappinelli 21. Stockholder Litigation, Fiduciary Duties, and the Officer Dilemma Megan Wischmeier Shaner Part V Comparative and International Shareholder Litigation a. The Globalization of Shareholder Litigation 22. The Globalization of Entrepreneurial Litigation: Law, Culture, and Incentives John C. Coffee, Jr. 23. The Teva Case: A Tale of a Race to the Bottom in Global Securities Regulation Sharon Hannes and Ehud Kamar b. Comparative Shareholder Litigation 24. A Transatlantic Perspective on Shareholder Litigation in Public Takeovers Dan Awrey and Blanaid Clarke 25. Private Ordering of Shareholder Litigation in the EU and the US Matteo Gargantini and Verity Winship 26. Mapping Types of Shareholder Lawsuits across Jurisdictions Martin Gelter 27. Securities Class Actions in Canada: 10 Years Later Poonam Puri c. Other Modes of Enforcement 28. CSRC Enforcement of Securities Laws: Preliminary Empirical Findings Chao Xi Index
£231.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Insider Trading and Market Manipulation:
Book SynopsisThis book explores how the globalization of securities markets has affected market manipulation and insider trading. It delves into the responses of securities regulators, discussing new regulations designed to deter such misconduct, as well as they ways in which detection, investigation and prosecution techniques are adapting to tackle insider trading and market manipulation that crosses international boundaries.Janet Austin concisely and clearly explains changes to securities markets that have taken place over the last few decades and their impacts, as well as the main detection and investigative techniques of securities regulators. She also provides an analysis of how the work of the International Organization of Securities Commissions (IOSCO) is assisting securities regulators as they gather information and evidence they need in order to prosecute these market offences. The book concludes with suggestions for the IOSCO and securities regulators to improve their efforts in addressing cross-border market manipulation and insider trading, with a view to enhancing the overall integrity of the securities markets.The approachable analysis and hard-to-find information in this book make it a valuable resource for securities regulators, legal practitioners, and academics.Trade Review‘Reading this book will certainly enrich knowledge and sharpen our understanding of the concept of insider trading and market manipulation.’ -- Rustam Mirrakhimov, Journal of International Banking Law and Regulation‘Janet Austin has made an important contribution to improving crossborder enforcement of market abuse by taking a close look at what has been done so far, what is working, and what needs to happen next.’ -- Gail E Henderson, Banking & Finance Law Review‘Few books on capital market regulation are more welcome than a treatise on insider trading! Bravo to Professor Austin for writing such a clear yet detailed and insightful analysis regarding cross-border enforcement of insider trading violations. A wonderful piece of writing.’ -- Anita Anand, University of Toronto, Canada‘Janet Austin has produced an engaging text, which individuals, from both a legal and non-legal background, can appreciate.’ -- Nicole Johnstone, International Trade & Business Law ReviewTable of ContentsContents: Preface 1. Introduction 2. The importance of taking enforcement action against cross border insider trading and market manipulation 3. The transformation of markets driving cross border insider trading and market manipulation 4. Investigating and enforcing insider trading and market manipulation laws across borders 5. Case studies of cross border insider trading and market manipulation 6. IOSCO and the IOSCO Multilateral Memorandum of Understanding Concerning Consultation and Cooperation 7. The role of IOSCO going forward 8. Conclusion and recommendations Bibliography Index
£105.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Research Handbook on Corporate Restructuring
Book SynopsisThis timely Research Handbook examines the increasingly economically vital topic of corporate restructuring. Reflecting a shift in the global approach to insolvency towards a focus on rescuing viable businesses rather than liquidation, chapters consider all areas of the law closely connected to corporate insolvency, rehabilitation and rescue, as well as the introduction of the EU Preventive Restructuring Directive and other reforms from around the world.Featuring international expert academics, practitioners and judges, the Research Handbook takes a thematic approach, exploring national and international models for rescue, stakeholders in insolvency, corporate structures and organisational models, specialist process issues, and institutional support, as well as interdisciplinary and cross-field aspects of insolvency and restructuring. Contributions analyse issues from a broad variety of perspectives, including the economic and social aspects of insolvency, and provide a comparative discussion of topics that will further inform global academic debate in this area.Scholars and students of corporate and insolvency law, commercial law, and law and economics, will find the inter-disciplinary legal, theoretical and jurisprudential discussion invaluable. The analysis of current reform agendas, practical and alternative solutions to common problems, and comparative approach will also be of interest to practitioners and policymakers.Trade Review‘Research Handbook on Corporate Restructuring is a “must-have” for college and university collections as well as the reading lists of professionals in the field. Highly recommended.’ -- James A Cox, Midwest Book Review'This Research Handbook, ably edited by Paul Omar and Jennifer Gant, contains 28 chapters written by prominent academics, researchers and judges from a wide range of jurisdictions. It provides a range of timely perspectives against which to assess current and proposed corporate rescue laws. Specialist commentators draw on the law as well as other disciplines; analyse international and comparative elements, and address an impressive range of stakeholders, entities and institutions. This is a welcome resource on corporate restructuring for policy-makers, scholars and practitioners alike.' -- Rosalind Mason, Queensland University of Technology, Australia'This is a thought provoking Handbook which makes a valuable and significant contribution to insolvency and restructuring scholarship. The editors have brought together leading commentators from across the globe and together they have produced an invaluable resource for insolvency research and policy development. The Handbook includes a broad repository of international insolvency procedures and thinking published at a time when restructuring measures will be stress tested like never before. For those navigating the choppy waters of insolvency this book makes an invaluable companion.' -- John Tribe, University of Liverpool, UKTable of ContentsContents: Preface xii 1 Corporate rescue through the ages 1 Paul J. Omar PART I NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL MODELS FOR RESCUE 2 International organisations and the search for global insolvency standards 17 Gerard McCormack 3 The evolution of corporate rescue in Canada and the United States 40 Jassmine Girgis 4 The idea of rescue and the Chapter 11 model 59 Edward Janger 5 Trust as a turnaround technique to influence the continuity versus asset recovery decision of restructuring bankers: An empirical tale 73 J A A Adriaanse and J I van der Rest 6 Reforms in adverse economic climates: how reforms take place in the Eurozone 87 Catarina Serra, Alexandra Kastrinou and Giulia Vallar PART II STAKEHOLDERS IN INSOLVENCY 7 Involving secured creditors in restructuring proceedings 120 Francisco Garcimartín and Nuria Bermejo 8 Potential liability for directors during corporate restructuring: comparative perspectives 143 Jason Harris and Anil Hargovan 9 Employees as stakeholders in restructuring and insolvency: acquired rights and business transfers 166 Jennifer L. L. Gant 10 The position of shareholders in a restructuring 185 Stephan Madaus 11 Consumers, entrepreneurs and insolvency proceedings 201 Tuula Linna PART III CORPORATE STRUCTURES AND ORGANISATIONAL MODELS 12 Corporate groups 214 Jessica Schmidt 13 Bank insolvency – recovery and resolution 228 Andrew Campbell and Paula Moffatt 14 Making insolvency law responsive to the needs of financially distressed micro and small enterprises 246 Janis Sarra 15 Franchisees as externalities of insolvent franchisors: a windfall gain for employees? 261 Jenny Buchan 16 Insolvent partnerships: development of a normative framework based on a contractual paradigm 278 Rebecca Parry PART IV SPECIALIST PROCESS ISSUES 17 Insurance procedures in corporate insolvency: a comparison of the arrangements in the United Kingdom, Australia, and New Zealand 299 Robin Bowley 18 Pension rights and funds 327 David Pollard 19 Patent-rich firms and corporate restructuring: patent signalling, valuation, and governance 346 Janice Denoncourt 20 The impact of artificial intelligence on insolvency law and practice 377 Christoph Henkel PART V INSTITUTIONAL SUPPORT 21 The realm of soft law instruments in restructuring and insolvency law 401 Gert-Jan Boon and Bob Wessels 22 Cross-border corporate restructurings, judicial assistance and judge-made law: New Zealand and Cayman Island experiences 430 Hon Paul Heath QC and Hon Justice Ian Kawaley 23 Corporate insolvency practitioners: ethics and fiduciary duties 447 Lézelle Jacobs PART VI INTERDISCIPLINARY AND CROSS-FIELDS OF INSOLVENCY AND RESTRUCTURING 24 Overlooked human rights concerns in the restructuring and insolvency context 466 Chrystin Ondersma 25 The role of social policy in corporate rescue and restructuring: a messy business 476 Jennifer L L Gant 26 Law and economics of corporate financial difficulty 500 Jonathan Hardman 27 A behavioural law and economics perspective on EU restructuring and insolvency law 513 Annika Wolf 28 The analytical boundary between corporate reorganisation and sale in corporate bankruptcy theory 525 Sarah Paterson Index
£235.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Enforcing Shareholders’ Duties
Book SynopsisA heavily debated topic, the evolution of shareholders' duties risks the transformation of the very concept of shareholder primacy, crucially associated with shareholder rights. Offering a distinctive and comprehensive examination of both current and forthcoming enforcement mechanisms in the area of shareholder duties, this timely book provides an exhaustive analysis of the many issues related to these mechanisms, and considers the ongoing challenges surrounding their implementation.Enforcing Shareholders' Duties is unique in critically challenging the revised Shareholder Rights Directive as well as other legal provisions. Adopting a holistic view of the possible enforcement issues shareholders may face in company law, it argues for a measured approach in the design of such enforcement mechanisms and for a careful consideration of the effects of a legal interventionist approach. Astute and engaging chapters provide arguments and recommendations for future regulatory initiatives aimed at ensuring shareholders will remain incentivised to invest in companies, whilst still assuming their responsibilities.Students and researchers with an interest in financial and corporate law, particularly from a policy and governance angle, will find this book an important resource. Its focus on the emerging agenda surrounding the enforcement of shareholders' duties ensure it is also highly relevant for legislators, policymakers, and practitioners.Contributors include: A. Anand, H.S. Birkmose, J. Borg-Barthet, I.H.-Y. Chiu, M. Gargantini, E. Howell, C. Malberti, M. Neville, J. Payne, C. PuskaTrade Review'The great financial crisis of 2008 led the EU to rethink the relationship between listed companies and shareholders. Institutional investors have been requested to play a stewardship role in listed companies as well as banks, and to force management to take a more long-term view. Enforcing Shareholders' Duties offers the first comprehensive analysis on the enforcement of these new obligations, examining the key issue as to whether jurisdictions should choose private, public or ''social'' enforcement, or a combination thereof, and to what extent? This book will be of great interest to institutional investors, companies, policymakers and academics, not just in the EU, but also worldwide.' --Pierre-Henri Conac, University of Luxembourg'The imposition of engagement and/or fiduciary duties upon shareholders, whether institutional or controlling ones, is a relatively new phenomenon in most jurisdictions, the implications of which for corporate law can hardly be overestimated. This volume fills an important gap in the literature by focusing on the law in action of shareholder duties. Its rich and insightful chapters give the reader a refined, nuanced and comprehensive understanding of the challenges and ramifications of the policies underlying the imposition of shareholder duties.' --Luca Enriques, University of Oxford, UK'The role of shareholders is paramount in corporate governance, and their duties are underexplored. This important book makes a crucial contribution to rethinking the different ways in which shareholders' obligations may be made operational in corporate law - with implications that must concern all scholars, policymakers and practitioners in this area.' --Wolf-Georg Ringe, University of Hamburg, GermanyTable of ContentsContents: Foreword Takis Tridimas PART I: The Contours of Enforcement 1. Legal and Economic Rationales for Shareholder Duties and their Enforcement Anita Anand and Christopher Puskas 2. Duties Imposed on Specific Shareholders Only, and Enforcement Implications Hanne Birkmose 3. Shareholder Engagement Duties: The European Move beyond Stewardship Christoph Van der Elst PART II: The Sources of Enforcement 4. Contractual Enforcement of Shareholders’ Duties Corrado Malberti 5. Private vs Public Enforcement of Shareholder Duties Iris Chiu 6. Legal vs Social Enforcement of Shareholder Duties Konstantinos Sergakis PART III: Sanctioning Shareholders’ Duties 7. Enforcing shareholder duties through suspension of the exercise of voting rights Karsten Sørensen and Mette Neville 8. Financial Sanctions for breach of shareholders’ duties Jennifer Payne and Elizabeth Howell 9. The Basis of Shareholder Liability for Corporate Wrongs Christian A. Witting PART IV: Barriers to Enforcement 10. Barriers to Shareholder Identification and Entitlement Matteo Gargantini 11. Barriers to the Enforcement of Shareholders’ Duties Flowing from Primary EU Law Christoph Teichmann and Lothar Wolff 12. Jurisdictional Barriers to Enforcement Justin Borg-Barthet Index
£115.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Strategies for Minimizing Risk Under the Foreign
Book SynopsisIn the minds of some, complying with the U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act and related laws is easy: 'you just don't bribe.' The reality, as sophisticated professionals should know, is not so simple. This book is for professionals across various disciplines who can assist in risk management and want to learn strategies for minimizing risk under aggressively enforced bribery laws. Written by a leading expert with real-world practice experience, this book elevates knowledge and skills through a comprehensive analysis of all legal authority and other relevant sources of information. It also guides readers through various components of compliance best practices from the fundamentals of conducting a risk assessment, to effectively communicating compliance expectations, to implementing and overseeing compliance strategies. With a focus on active learning, this book allows readers to assess their acquired knowledge through various issue-spotting scenarios and skills exercises and thereby gain confidence in their specific job functions. Anyone seeking an informed and comprehensive understanding of the modern era of enforcement of bribery laws and related risk management strategies will find this book to be a valuable resource including in-house compliance personnel, FCPA and related practitioners, board of director members and executive officers.Trade Review'Professor Mike Koehler is a leading authority on anti-corruption. He uses that knowledge to anticipate trends in the law and to distill the principles and actions that matter in practice. For companies that want to get the most value out of their anti-corruption efforts, Professor Koehler's advice is invaluable.' --Jay Jorgensen, Executive Vice President and Global Chief Ethics and Compliance Officer, Walmart, US'For years, Mike Koehler - also known as the ''FCPA Professor'' - has been a leading voice in an important conversation about one of the key enforcement priorities of the United States government. This book is a prime example of why corporate compliance professionals and practitioners alike continue listen to Professor Koehler. His rigorous discussion and analysis of the legal framework underlying the FCPA is a must read.' --Jay Darden, Paul Hastings LLP and former Assistant Chief, Department of Justice Fraud Section'Professor Mike Koehler is an authoritative and practical voice in understanding the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act and the many related US and foreign laws and regulations impacting how companies conduct business in the global economy. He has an encyclopedic knowledge of the FCPA and distills it into understandable and user-friendly teachings that both lawyers and non-lawyers can understand and use.' --Claudius Sokenu, Andeavor, USTable of ContentsContents: Introduction and Overview 1. A Diverse Group of Professionals Need Skills to Spot Risk under the FCPA and Related Laws 2. The FCPA’s Core Anti-Bribery Provisions and Related Risk Management Strategies 3. A Focus on Third Parties and Related Risk Management Strategies 4. The FCPA’s Exception, Affirmative Defenses and Related Risk Management Strategies 5. The FCPA’s Books and Records and Internal Controls Provisions 6. Compliance Best Practices and the Fundamentals of Conducting a Risk Assessment 7. Implementing a Compliance Program and Effectively Communicating Compliance Expectations 8. Overseeing A Compliance Program Conclusion Index
£124.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Creditor Treatment in Corporate Insolvency Law
Book SynopsisThe significant role of credit in obtaining corporate capital means that credit and the treatment of creditors’ interests raises distinctive issues in the event of company insolvency. In this book, Kayode Akintola addresses these issues, providing an exceptional in-depth analysis of the principles, policy and practice of creditor treatment in corporate insolvency law.Key features include: an exploration of aspects of corporate insolvency law in need of reform an extensive examination of the rights and priorities of secured and unsecured creditors in English corporate insolvency law an analysis of the impacts of key legislative developments, such as the Insolvency (England and Wales) Rules 2016, and recent case law, such as the Supreme Court decision in the Lehman Waterfall case a unique consideration of bank insolvency regimes in the context of creditor treatment. Creditor Treatment in Corporate Insolvency Law is a specialist guide for legal practitioners and members of the judiciary looking for a clear account of current law and practice in this field. It is also a valuable doctrinal treatment of the law for scholars of corporate insolvency law, and will be of interest to policymakers involved in debates about reforms to creditor treatment and secured transactions law.Trade Review‘The book is geared primarily towards practitioners and the judiciary.. Nevertheless, this monograph is more than appropriate for research purposes in the areas of corporate insolvency and corporate finance.’ -- Eugenio Vaccari, Eurofenix‘The Elgar insolvency series presents legal titles in a format that allows for ease of navigation to a particular point of law, each written by specialists in their respective fields, often with insight either from private practice or from an academic perspective. This work by Dr Akintola not only fulfils that intention, but his insights are compelling, eloquent and address several imperati ve questions. The concise discussion on the case law and statutory provisions make the work accessible, and the arguments easy to follow - an impressive act given the technical nature of the subject. The way in which this book has been written will mean that it maintains its relevance, and importance in future discussions that concern creditor treatment, including the task of the UK reforming its insolvency system for the post-Brexit era. There is no doubt that this work will offer an authoritative statement on the law and practice of credits in regard to corporate insolvency. This book will be of interest to legal practitioners, members of the judiciary and academics who require knowledge of creditor treatment and associated issues.’ -- John M Wood, Insolvency Intelligence‘This book uses a mixture of empirical data, doctrinal argument and policy analysis to re-examine the issues arising from the use of secured financing by a company in the situation where security is most crucial: the insolvency of the debtor. It is an interesting and lively addition to the debate as to how English law should respond to this situation.’ -- Louise Gullifer, University of Cambridge, UK‘Dr Kayode Akintola’s new book Creditor Treatment in Corporate Insolvency Law tackles the most significant issues affecting creditors in corporate insolvency in a robust and sophisticated manner. It is lucid and compelling; written in easy and accessible prose, it presents complex issues and arguments simply and clearly. It is a work of great scholarship and probably the most significant contribution to English corporate insolvency law in the last decade. This welcome addition to the scholarship on corporate insolvency law will appeal to practitioners, academics, students, policymakers and indeed anyone interested in the principles or policies underlying English corporate insolvency law.’ -- Fidelis Oditah QC, South Square, UK'Dr Akintola's thoughtful, comprehensive exposition of how debt finance shapes insolvency law and how the law's various priority ordering techniques affect debt finance cements his place as a member of the UK's exciting new generation of insolvency law scholars. He usefully illuminates many of the issues that are at stake as the UK embarks on the task of reforming its insolvency system for the post-Brexit era.' -- Adrian Walters, Chicago-Kent College of Law, USTable of ContentsContents: Foreword Part I - Credit and the Company 1. The Company, its Capital and Insolvency 2. Variants of Credit Part II - Creditor Treatment in Corporate Insolvency Law 3. Principles of Creditor Treatment 4. The Treatment of Unsecured Creditors 5. The Treatment of Secured Creditors Part III - Closing: Creditor Treatment in Special Insolvency Proceedings 6. Bank Insolvency Proceedings Index
£136.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Limited Liability: A Legal and Economic Analysis
Book Synopsis'Bainbridge and Henderson have given us one of the most important books on one of the most important contemporary legal issues, the liability of individual and corporate shareholders for corporate debts. There is no issue in corporate law more subject to uncertainty and no issue more likely to be litigated. No single book has ever attempted, much less carried off, the complete historical, international, economic and legal theoretical exegesis of limited liability, which these two authors do with range, depth, confidence and even a bit of panache. This monograph, of crucial interest both to scholars and practitioners, will become an instant classic and an immediate authority.'Stephen B. Presser, Northwestern University and the author of Piercing the Corporate VeilThe modern corporation has become central to our society. The key feature of the corporation that makes it such an attractive form of human collaboration is its limited liability. This book explores how allowing those who form the corporation to limit their downside risk and personal liability to only the amount they invest allows for more risks to be taken at a lower cost.This comprehensive economic analysis of the policy debate surrounding the laws governing limited liability examines limited it not only in an American context, but internationally, as the authors consider issues of limited liability in Britain, Europe and Asia. Stephen Bainbridge and M. Todd Henderson begin with an exploration of the history and theory of limited liability, delve into an extended analysis of corporate veil piercing and related doctrines, and conclude with thoughts on possible future reforms. Limited liability in unincorporated entities, reverse veil piercing and enterprise liability are also addressed. This comprehensive book will be of great interest to students and scholars of corporate law. The book will also be an invaluable resource for judges and practitioners.Trade Review'This book does a wonderful job of bringing sharp and clear analysis to a breathtakingly complex and poorly understood area of law. In particular, the book is distinctive for its careful treatment of the inefficiencies generated by current confusion and apparent subjectivity of the law in many states. Also of interest is the book's thoughtful economic analysis of the various ways that parent companies and other controlling investors react to the confused state of the law.' --Jonathan Macey, Yale University'Professors Bainbridge and Henderson have made an outstanding contribution to the literature on limited liability. There is something valuable for everyone in this book, which provides not only a clear and comprehensive exposition of the doctrine and theory of limited liability, but also with a cogent and clever solution to limited liability's deeply troubled exception, veil-piercing. This is an important book in one of the most important areas of business law, and is a tremendous, versatile resource for attorneys, entrepreneurs, students and scholars alike.' --Peter Oh, University of Pittsburgh'This new text represents scholarship in its finest form. Professors Bainbridge and Henderson provide, in succinct form, a masterly coverage of the central corporate law concept of limited liability. . . This is a ''must have'' component for the personal library of any serious scholar of corporate law in the developed world. Students at all levels will benefit from the insights on offer. It could be read with interest by a range of policymakers. I would recommend it without any qualification.' --International Company and Commercial Law ReviewTable of ContentsContents: 1. Introduction 2. History of Limited Liability 3. Why does the Law Limit Corporate Shareholders’ Liability? 4. Veil Piercing Standards 5. What Law Applies? 6. Veil Piercing in Statutory Contexts 7. Related Doctrines 8. Veil Piercing in Unincorporated Entities 9. Limited Liability in Comparative Perspective 10. Rethinking Veil Piercing 11. Conclusion Index
£35.95
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Strategies for Minimizing Risk Under the Foreign
Book SynopsisIn the minds of some, complying with the U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act and related laws is easy: 'you just don't bribe.' The reality, as sophisticated professionals should know, is not so simple. This book is for professionals across various disciplines who can assist in risk management and want to learn strategies for minimizing risk under aggressively enforced bribery laws. Written by a leading expert with real-world practice experience, this book elevates knowledge and skills through a comprehensive analysis of all legal authority and other relevant sources of information. It also guides readers through various components of compliance best practices from the fundamentals of conducting a risk assessment, to effectively communicating compliance expectations, to implementing and overseeing compliance strategies. With a focus on active learning, this book allows readers to assess their acquired knowledge through various issue-spotting scenarios and skills exercises and thereby gain confidence in their specific job functions. Anyone seeking an informed and comprehensive understanding of the modern era of enforcement of bribery laws and related risk management strategies will find this book to be a valuable resource including in-house compliance personnel, FCPA and related practitioners, board of director members and executive officers.Trade Review'Professor Mike Koehler is a leading authority on anti-corruption. He uses that knowledge to anticipate trends in the law and to distill the principles and actions that matter in practice. For companies that want to get the most value out of their anti-corruption efforts, Professor Koehler's advice is invaluable.' --Jay Jorgensen, Executive Vice President and Global Chief Ethics and Compliance Officer, Walmart, US'For years, Mike Koehler - also known as the ''FCPA Professor'' - has been a leading voice in an important conversation about one of the key enforcement priorities of the United States government. This book is a prime example of why corporate compliance professionals and practitioners alike continue listen to Professor Koehler. His rigorous discussion and analysis of the legal framework underlying the FCPA is a must read.' --Jay Darden, Paul Hastings LLP and former Assistant Chief, Department of Justice Fraud Section'Professor Mike Koehler is an authoritative and practical voice in understanding the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act and the many related US and foreign laws and regulations impacting how companies conduct business in the global economy. He has an encyclopedic knowledge of the FCPA and distills it into understandable and user-friendly teachings that both lawyers and non-lawyers can understand and use.' --Claudius Sokenu, Andeavor, USTable of ContentsContents: Introduction and Overview 1. A Diverse Group of Professionals Need Skills to Spot Risk under the FCPA and Related Laws 2. The FCPA’s Core Anti-Bribery Provisions and Related Risk Management Strategies 3. A Focus on Third Parties and Related Risk Management Strategies 4. The FCPA’s Exception, Affirmative Defenses and Related Risk Management Strategies 5. The FCPA’s Books and Records and Internal Controls Provisions 6. Compliance Best Practices and the Fundamentals of Conducting a Risk Assessment 7. Implementing a Compliance Program and Effectively Communicating Compliance Expectations 8. Overseeing A Compliance Program Conclusion Index
£64.95
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Comparative Corporate Governance
Book SynopsisThis research handbook provides a state-of-the-art perspective on how corporate governance differs between countries around the world. It covers highly topical issues including corporate purpose, corporate social responsibility and shareholder activism.Through coverage of key jurisdictions in Asia, Europe and the Americas, this research handbook reveals differences and similarities between legal traditions that have shaped different countries’ laws, and the extent to which these laws have become more similar over the past decades. It takes a broad perspective throughout comparative corporate governance, considering the rights and duties of shareholders, including controlling and minority shareholders, directors and the relationship between their powers. Chapters address key topics such as the methods and goals of comparative corporate governance research and enforcement of corporate governance.Informative and perceptive, Comparative Corporate Governance will be a key resource for academics and students in commercial law, comparative law and government studies. Internationally oriented corporate law practitioners and law firms will also be interested in the legal information contained in the chapters.Trade Review’Comparative Corporate Governance is an excellent “go-to” guidebook for both academics and practitioners in corporate law and finance.’ -- Irina Bevza, LSE Review of Books'Afra Afsharipour and Martin Gelter have assembled an outstanding and truly diverse team of corporate law scholars to give us a state-of-the-art snapshot of both new and old key topics in comparative corporate governance. Many of this book's chapters are destined to become a key reference for future scholarship in the field.' -- Luca Enriques, University of Oxford, UK'Thoughtfully curated, skillfully executed, and refreshingly global, this research handbook provides novel insights on the most important areas in the field from established leaders and rising stars. It is a must have resource for anyone interested in comparative corporate governance.' -- Dan W. Puchniak, National University of SingaporeTable of ContentsContents: 1 Introduction to comparative corporate governance 1 Afra Afsharipour and Martin Gelter PART I PERENNIAL DEBATES IN COMPARATIVE CORPORATE GOVERNANCE 2 Methods of comparative corporate governance 20 Christopher M. Bruner 3 Corporate law and economic development 38 Vikramaditya S. Khanna 4 The law and economics of comparative corporate law 56 María Isabel Sáez Lacave and María Gutiérrez Urtiaga 5 Corporate purpose and short-termism 73 Martin Petrin and Barnali Choudhury 6 Comparative and transnational developments in corporate social responsibility 92 Cynthia A. Williams PART II THE BOARD: ITS DUTIES AND ITS FUNCTIONS 7 The structure of the board of directors: boards and governance strategies in the US, the UK and Germany 116 Klaus J. Hopt and Patrick C. Leyens 8 Board composition: between independent directors, minority representatives and employee representatives 144 Jean Jacques du Plessis 9 Diversity and the board of directors: a comparative perspective 179 Darren Rosenblum 10 Board duties: the duty of loyalty and self-dealing 200 Marco Corradi and Geneviève Helleringer 11 The duty of care and the business judgment rule: a case study in legal transplants and local narratives 220 Carsten Gerner-Beuerle 12 Board duties: monitoring, risk management and compliance 242 Virginia Harper Ho 13 Who decides executive pay? A comparative perspective 263 Li-Wen Lin 14 Accounting and convergence in corporate governance: doctrinal or economic path dependence? 282 Martin Gelter PART III SHAREHOLDERS 15 Shareholder proposals shaking up shareholder say: a critical comparison of the United States and Europe 302 Sofie Cools 16 Controlling shareholders and their duties 324 Gaia Balp and Marco Ventoruzzo 17 Minority shareholders’ rights, powers and duties: the market for corporate influence 346 Umakanth Varottil 18 Institutional investors, activist funds and ownership structure 368 Assaf Hamdani and Sharon Hannes 19 Diversified enterprises with controlling shareholders: a theoretical analysis of risk-sharing, control/voting leverage, and tunneling 389 Sang Yop Kang PART IV ENFORCEMENT 20 Public versus private enforcement in corporate governance 412 Pierre-Henri Conac 21 Direct and derivative shareholder suits: towards a functional and practical taxonomy 431 Alan K Koh and Samantha S Tang PART V SPECIAL TOPICS: MERGERS AND ACQUISITIONS 22 Corporate governance in negotiated takeovers: the changing comparative landscape 455 Afra Afsharipour 23 Managing management buyouts: a US-UK comparative analysis 477 Andrew F. Tuch Index
£230.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Research Handbook on Global Governance, Business
Book SynopsisThis essential Research Handbook provides a comprehensive and critical assessment of the global governance instruments related to business and human rights from an interdisciplinary perspective. Contributions from a diverse range of leading international scholars offer an overview of the existing literature and rapidly-evolving research discipline, as well as identifying key trends and outlining an ambitious future research agenda.The Research Handbook first examines governance initiatives that operate across economic sectors, discussing both public and private initiatives at state, regional and international levels that seek to develop, implement and enforce rules with regard to the impacts of transnational business activities on human rights. Chapters then investigate particular economic sectors – including textiles, electronics, agro-chemical, construction, and finance – to assess the ways in which different initiatives attempt to mitigate risks and address business-related human rights abuses.Scholars of law, regulatory governance, global governance, management, human rights and social sciences who are interested in gaining a deeper understanding of the emerging business and human rights regime will find this Research Handbook a crucial read. It will also prove a useful and thorough introduction for students, scholars and practitioners new to the field of business and human rights.Trade Review‘The chapters in this Handbook present a comprehensive and sophisticated analysis of the wide-ranging initiatives of non-state actors to improve the human rights performance of global firms. An impressive and informative collaborative effort by two dozen distinguished scholars that tells us both what we now know and what we still need to learn about this important subject.’ -- David Vogel, University of California, Berkeley, US‘A remarkable work with an impressive line-up of experts from different fields which provides an in-depth analysis of a wide range of issues pertaining to the field of business and human rights. A must read for anyone interested or working in the field!’ -- Claire Bright, NOVA School of Law, PortugalTable of ContentsContents: 1 Global governance of business and human rights: introduction 1 Axel Marx, Kari Otteburn, Diana Lica, Geert van Calster and Jan Wouters 2 The United Nations Draft Treaty on Business and Human Rights: an analysis of its emergence, development and potential 21 Radu Mares 3 Business and human rights and regional systems of human rights protection: applying a governance lens 44 Claire Methven O’Brien 4 The United Nations Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights: what contribution are the National Action Plans making? 75 Carmen Márquez Carrasco 5 Transparency and human rights in global supply chains: from corporate-led disclosure to a right to know 99 Olga Martin-Ortega 6 Human rights due diligence instruments: evaluating the current legislative landscape 120 Robert McCorquodale 7 Public procurement as an instrument to pursue human rights protection 142 Sope Williams-Elegbe 8 Voluntary standards for business and human rights: reviewing and categorizing the field 161 Andreas Rasche 9 The efficacy of voluntary standards, sustainability certifications, and ethical labels 176 Elizabeth A. Bennett 10 No ISO fix for human rights: a critical perspective on ISO 26000 guidance on social responsibility 204 Stéphanie Bijlmakers 11 Seeking remedies for corporate human rights abuses: what is the contribution of OECD National Contact Points? 228 Kari Otteburn and Axel Marx 12 Business and human rights: what role for National Human Rights Institutions? 253 Linda C. Reif 13 The role of Human Rights Ombudsman Institutions in business and human rights 273 Jernej Letnar Černič 14 Regulating human rights in the textile sector: smoke and mirrors 290 Justine Nolan 15 The electronics industry: governance of business and human rights against a background of complexity 311 Peter Pawlicki 16 Biotechnologies and concentration in the agro-biochemical-technological market: risks and challenges for human rights 333 Ana Luiza da Gama e Souza 17 Human rights and the global construction sector: deconstructing the challenges faced by low-wage workers 357 David Segall 18 Ensuring financial sector compliance with human rights: from the UNGPs to complicity 379 Marta Bordignon Index
£198.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Research Handbook on Corporate Purpose and
Book SynopsisThis insightful Research Handbook contributes to the theoretical and practical understanding of corporate purpose and personhood, which has become the central debate of corporate law. It provides cutting-edge thoughts on the role of corporations in society and the nature of their rights and responsibilities.Featuring contributions from leading scholars, the Research Handbook invites readers to reconsider corporate purpose and personhood by offering a perceptive route to better understand changes that are already apparent in the modern corporation across the world. It provides examples of how a 21st century lens for viewing corporate purpose and personhood will leave us with a different picture and a new understanding of these topics, as well as future directions in corporate social responsibility. Chapters offer analysis of a wide range of topics related to corporate purpose and personhood, including shareholder primacy, stakeholder governance, corporate social responsibility and benefit corporations.This Research Handbook will be a vital resource for students and academics in the areas of corporate and constitutional law, as well as for researchers with an interest in management, business and social responsibility.Trade Review'What is a corporation, and what is its social and economic function? These questions about the ''purpose'' and the ''personhood'' of corporations go to the heart of many urgent problems in corporate law and finance, as well as in society’s choices about regulating corporations. Yet they are unsettled, and passionately debated, even among the experts. This collection of essays, solicited and edited by two superstars of the corporate law field, brings together work by 22 of the most well-respected senior scholars, and the brightest, up-and-coming junior scholars to explore these issues. Each brings unique insights from other related fields that illuminate whole new ways to parse and understand the personhood and purpose debates. This Handbook is a must read for anyone working on these issues!' -- Margaret M. Blair, Vanderbilt University Law School, US'The enduring question of the role of corporations in society is again central. With evidence that stockholder power has contributed to lower gainsharing with workers, increased externalities, and corporate conduct slowing the necessary response to climate change, finding a positive way forward to capture the dynamism of the corporate form while channeling it in a positive way consistent with the public interest is vital. This Handbook gives the reader, in one shot, access to the thoughts of diverse viewpoints, but sharing a singular characteristic, all of them have perspectives worth considering.' -- Leo E. Strine, Jr., Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz, USTable of ContentsContents: Corporate purpose and personhood: an introduction ix PART I JUMPING OFF POINTS FOR A NEW LOOK AT TRADITIONAL TOPICS 1 What Jensen and Meckling really said about the public company 2 Brian R. Cheffins 2 Business purpose and the objective of the corporation 27 Edward B. Rock 3 A more equitable corporate purpose 47 Veronica Root Martinez PART II SHAREHOLDERS VS. STAKEHOLDERS, BENEFIT CORPORATIONS, AND ESG 4 The “value” of a public benefit corporation 68 Jill E. Fisch & Steven Davidoff Solomon 5 Enlightened shareholder value, stakeholderism, and the quest for managerial accountability 91 Dorothy S. Lund 6 The shareholder-stakeholder alliance: exposing the link between shareholder power and the rise of a corporate social purpose 109 Lisa M. Fairfax 7 ESG investing, or, if you can’t beat ’em, join ’em 130 Ann M. Lipton 8 Purpose in business association statutes: much ado about something (but not much) 148 Brett McDonnell 9 For whom is the corporation managed and what is its purpose? A stakeholder perspective based on the law of Delaware 165 Cynthia A. Williams PART III BROADER THEORETICAL FOUNDATIONS FOR GROUNDING VIEWS OF CORPORATE PURPOSE AND PERSONHOOD 10 Shareholder primacy is illogical 186 Frank Partnoy 11 The “franchise” view of the corporation: purpose, personality, public policy 201 Saule T. Omarova 12 Corporate personality, purpose, and liability 222 Paul B. Miller 13 Facts and values in corporate legal theory 240 James D. Nelson PART IV CORPORATE PERSONALITY, POLITICS, AND RIGHTS 14 Regulatory partitioning as a key function of corporate personality 263 Mariana Pargendler 15 Corporate personhood and the putative First Amendment right to discriminate 283 Kent Greenfield & Daniel A. Rubens 16 The corporation’s political purpose 299 Sarah C. Haan 17 Personhood, procedure and the endurance of corporate compliance 320 Miriam H. Baer PART V LESSONS FROM COMPARATIVE AND INTERNATIONAL STUDY AND POSSIBLEWAYS FORWARD 18 Beyond shareholder value: exploring justifications for a broader corporate purpose 344 Martin Petrin 19 Lessons from India’s struggles with corporate purpose 362 Afra Afsharipour 20 Varieties of shareholderism: three views of the corporate purpose cathedral 386 Amir N. Licht Index
£203.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Redefining Harmonisation: Lessons from EU
Book SynopsisProviding a definition of the concept of harmonisation within the context of the European Union, this timely book debunks the idea that EU harmonisation measures are made behind closed doors in Brussels and imposed, top-down, on the Member States.Promoting the vision of the EU as an arena of dialectic law-making, Redefining Harmonisation tackles the most debated issues within the study of harmonisation, including ambiguity of language, ambiguity of objectives in European law, and a declining level of support for further European integration. Emilie Ghio examines the purpose of harmonisation through an analysis of the most important provision of EU primary law, Article 114(1). Chapters analyse the core elements of Article 114(1), namely the link between harmonisation and the internal market, the role of the Member States in the harmonisation process, and the harmonisation language adopted by the EU. Ghio puts this analysis to the test by studying harmonisation in action, through case studies on EU primary law.Offering an in-depth exploration of the concept of EU harmonisation through the lens of European insolvency law, this book will be an insightful read for students interested in EU law and the law-making process. This will also be a useful resource for insolvency law and governance scholars, looking to develop their knowledge of this growing topic.Trade Review‘This is an imaginative work that is well-researched and well-thought-out. The concepts are clearly presented and definitions elucidated well. It is a work that invites thoughtfulness in how it goes beyond a utilitarian description of the process to consider the fundamentals of that process. What is more important, though, is that it attempts to provide answers to questions that were once considered, but which have been side-lined in the quest for more and more harmonisation. Thus, this work deserves a place on the shelves of anyone who has ever encountered the dynamics of restructuring and insolvency and posed the question why.’ -- Paul Omar, International Insolvency Review‘A number of audiences are likely to find this an interesting book. These include readers interested in the concept of harmonisation of laws and in the practical issues inherent in drafting legislation, broadly defined; as well as readers from outside Europe, who are interested in the evolution and internal dynamics of the EU. The author brings together useful multi-disciplinary perspectives on defining and reconceptualising harmonisation, through the lens of the EU and a specific case study of the dynamic EU insolvency law.’ -- Rosalind Mason, Queensland University of Technology, AustraliaTable of ContentsContents: 1. Introduction: the harmonisation debate in the EU PART I HARMONISATION ISSUES 2. Issue n. 1: the harmonisation language 3. Issue n. 2: the purpose of harmonisation 4. Issue n. 3: harmonisation in (times of) crisis PART II HARMONISATION IN ACTION 5. Harmonisation in action: European insolvency law PART III RETHINKING HARMONISATION 6. Defining harmonisation 7. Reconceptualising harmonisation Bibliography Index
£88.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Anti-Corruption Compliance: A Guide for Small and
Book SynopsisThis indispensible book offers step-by-step guidance to small and mid-sized companies and non-profit organizations in managing corruption risks in overseas markets. It covers how and why to build a culture of integrity, develop a risk-based anti-corruption compliance programme, and engage with other industry players in collective action against shared corruption challenges. The focus on culture, compliance and collective action helps resource-stretched companies to build a strong foundation for a healthy and flourishing organization, as well as contribute towards raising standards of integrity across their industry. Key features include: Guidance for creating and contributing to collective action Quick definitions, tips and practical tools such as checklists A hands-on approach with an emphasis on culture and leadership Case studies and real-life examples of both corruption risks and the importance of a strong compliance culture. Anti-Corruption Compliance will be an invaluable resource for senior managers of small and mid-sized organizations in minimizing exposure to corruption risks in international markets. It will also prove useful to corporate lawyers and others involved with compliance functions in larger companies, as well as to academics and students of corporate law with an interest in anti-corruption and compliance.Trade Review'This book should have a place in the libraries of SMEs and MNEs alike, and worn copies on the desks of compliance personnel and other senior company officers concerned with risk. Well-written and researched, the book should help enlighten and inform its primary audience of SMEs as well as others ranging from experienced compliance professionals at MNEs to regulators and academics. The case studies put real meat on the bones of sometimes obtuse or confusing anti-corruption laws and showcase possible compliance responses and good governance solutions to difficult real-life corruption risks.' --Michael Silverman, Hughes Hubbard & Reed LLP and first World Bank Group Integrity Compliance Officer, US'This book is a must-read for people who are serious about understanding and complying with the myriad rules about corruption. The book is concise and direct, but comprehensive - it packs tremendous insight into a digestible format. I recommend this book to everyone with an interest in corruption control.' --Philip M. Nichols, University of Pennsylvania, US'Anti-corruption compliance is a must for SMEs as they are more vulnerable than large multinationals. At the same time, putting in place an anti-bribery anti-corruption (ABAC) compliance programme is often considered costly and burdensome, especially for SMEs. Gemma Aiolfi debunks these assumptions. The author, who has extensive experience in the area, clearly illustrates how anti-corruption compliance ought not to be ''a standalone topic but plays into wider frameworks of business strategy and risk management''. As she rightly points out ABAC compliance is not only a question of policies, process and procedures; it is first and foremost a pillar for a sound and sustainable corporate culture. In that respect being an SME may be an advantage rather than a disadvantage. Aiolfi's book addresses policy issues and presents practical solutions in a condensed and user-friendly manner. It is great reading for all practitioners, be they chief compliance officers, in house and external lawyers or CEOs.' --Nicola Bonucci, Paul Hastings (Europe) LLP, Paris, FranceTable of ContentsContents: 1. Introduction 2. Drivers of anti-corruption compliance affecting SMEs 3. Culture, leadership and governance 4. Corruption risks in context and how to assess them 5. From the code of conduct to controls 6. Common questions and practical tips 7. Anti-corruption collective action Appendix: International anti-corruption standards and a selection of national laws Index
£100.64
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Anti-Corruption Compliance: A Guide for Small and
Book SynopsisThis indispensible book offers step-by-step guidance to small and mid-sized companies and non-profit organizations in managing corruption risks in overseas markets. It covers how and why to build a culture of integrity, develop a risk-based anti-corruption compliance programme, and engage with other industry players in collective action against shared corruption challenges. The focus on culture, compliance and collective action helps resource-stretched companies to build a strong foundation for a healthy and flourishing organization, as well as contribute towards raising standards of integrity across their industry. Key features include: Guidance for creating and contributing to collective action Quick definitions, tips and practical tools such as checklists A hands-on approach with an emphasis on culture and leadership Case studies and real-life examples of both corruption risks and the importance of a strong compliance culture. Anti-Corruption Compliance will be an invaluable resource for senior managers of small and mid-sized organizations in minimizing exposure to corruption risks in international markets. It will also prove useful to corporate lawyers and others involved with compliance functions in larger companies, as well as to academics and students of corporate law with an interest in anti-corruption and compliance.Trade Review'This book should have a place in the libraries of SMEs and MNEs alike, and worn copies on the desks of compliance personnel and other senior company officers concerned with risk. Well-written and researched, the book should help enlighten and inform its primary audience of SMEs as well as others ranging from experienced compliance professionals at MNEs to regulators and academics. The case studies put real meat on the bones of sometimes obtuse or confusing anti-corruption laws and showcase possible compliance responses and good governance solutions to difficult real-life corruption risks.' --Michael Silverman, Hughes Hubbard & Reed LLP and first World Bank Group Integrity Compliance Officer, US'This book is a must-read for people who are serious about understanding and complying with the myriad rules about corruption. The book is concise and direct, but comprehensive - it packs tremendous insight into a digestible format. I recommend this book to everyone with an interest in corruption control.' --Philip M. Nichols, University of Pennsylvania, US'Anti-corruption compliance is a must for SMEs as they are more vulnerable than large multinationals. At the same time, putting in place an anti-bribery anti-corruption (ABAC) compliance programme is often considered costly and burdensome, especially for SMEs. Gemma Aiolfi debunks these assumptions. The author, who has extensive experience in the area, clearly illustrates how anti-corruption compliance ought not to be ''a standalone topic but plays into wider frameworks of business strategy and risk management''. As she rightly points out ABAC compliance is not only a question of policies, process and procedures; it is first and foremost a pillar for a sound and sustainable corporate culture. In that respect being an SME may be an advantage rather than a disadvantage. Aiolfi's book addresses policy issues and presents practical solutions in a condensed and user-friendly manner. It is great reading for all practitioners, be they chief compliance officers, in house and external lawyers or CEOs.' --Nicola Bonucci, Paul Hastings (Europe) LLP, Paris, FranceTable of ContentsContents: 1. Introduction 2. Drivers of anti-corruption compliance affecting SMEs 3. Culture, leadership and governance 4. Corruption risks in context and how to assess them 5. From the code of conduct to controls 6. Common questions and practical tips 7. Anti-corruption collective action Appendix: International anti-corruption standards and a selection of national laws Index
£57.90
Edward Elgar Publishing Concepts of Company Law
Book SynopsisEmploying detailed case studies and real-world examples, this accessible textbook presents a clear overview of the core concepts of company law. The text will provide readers with a holistic understanding of the theoretical, financial, societal and practical aspects of company law.
£109.25
Edward Elgar Publishing Concepts of Company Law
Book SynopsisEmploying detailed case studies and real-world examples, this accessible textbook presents a clear overview of the core concepts of company law. The text will provide readers with a holistic understanding of the theoretical, financial, societal and practical aspects of company law.
£36.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Advanced Introduction to Cross-Border Insolvency
Book SynopsisElgar Advanced Introductions are stimulating and thoughtful introductions to major fields in the social sciences, business and law, expertly written by the world’s leading scholars. Designed to be accessible yet rigorous, they offer concise and lucid surveys of the substantive and policy issues associated with discrete subject areas.The Advanced Introduction to Cross-Border Insolvency Lawprovides a clear and concise overview of cross-border insolvency law with particular focus on the rules governing insolvency proceedings that occur between and across countries. Increasingly, such proceedings have an international dimension, which may involve, for example, debtors with assets abroad, foreign creditors, contractual agreements with counterparties in different jurisdictions, or companies with offices or subsidiaries in a different country. The book expertly steers the reader through the complex interactions between national and supra-national rules, international model laws, and the principles that underpin them. Key Features: Uses numerous practical examples to illustrate key concepts Provides both in-depth information for advanced readers and accessible information for beginners in the field Succinctly evaluates case law and literature Follows a comparative law approach with a principle-based methodology in order to fully explore the most important issues This enlightening Advanced Introduction will be of great benefit to those studying company, commercial, and private international law, as well as to the non-specialist practitioner. Insolvency scholars will also appreciate the astute insights.Trade Review‘This book is expertly and clearly written by one of the leading experts in the field. The language is technical but not difficult, and people approaching this field for the first time will have no difficulty in understanding the basics of the subjects covered in its eight chapters. The book comes as highly recommended for those who conduct research on this topic for the first time and/or who would like to enrich their knowledge by referring to key cases and other publications in the area.’ -- Eugenio Vaccari, International Company and Commercial Law Review‘This latest addition to the very impressive oeuvre of Prof. Reinhard Bork in the field of (cross-border) insolvency law provides a comprehensive, clear and convincing treatise of issues relevant in a cross-border insolvency context. Bork addresses matters of jurisdiction, applicable law, recognition, cooperation and coordination, secondary proceedings, the position of foreign creditors in domestic proceedings and group insolvencies on the basis of both the European Insolvency Regulation and the UNCITRAL Model Law on Cross-Border Insolvency. It is a “must read” for everyone working in or studying insolvency law. I am convinced that it will find its way to and benefit practitioners and scholars around the globe.’ -- P.M. (Michael) Veder, Radboud University, the Netherlands
£98.67
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Advanced Introduction to Cross-Border Insolvency
Book SynopsisElgar Advanced Introductions are stimulating and thoughtful introductions to major fields in the social sciences, business and law, expertly written by the world’s leading scholars. Designed to be accessible yet rigorous, they offer concise and lucid surveys of the substantive and policy issues associated with discrete subject areas.The Advanced Introduction to Cross-Border Insolvency Lawprovides a clear and concise overview of cross-border insolvency law with particular focus on the rules governing insolvency proceedings that occur between and across countries. Increasingly, such proceedings have an international dimension, which may involve, for example, debtors with assets abroad, foreign creditors, contractual agreements with counterparties in different jurisdictions, or companies with offices or subsidiaries in a different country. The book expertly steers the reader through the complex interactions between national and supra-national rules, international model laws, and the principles that underpin them. Key Features: Uses numerous practical examples to illustrate key concepts Provides both in-depth information for advanced readers and accessible information for beginners in the field Succinctly evaluates case law and literature Follows a comparative law approach with a principle-based methodology in order to fully explore the most important issues This enlightening Advanced Introduction will be of great benefit to those studying company, commercial, and private international law, as well as to the non-specialist practitioner. Insolvency scholars will also appreciate the astute insights.Trade Review‘This book is expertly and clearly written by one of the leading experts in the field. The language is technical but not difficult, and people approaching this field for the first time will have no difficulty in understanding the basics of the subjects covered in its eight chapters. The book comes as highly recommended for those who conduct research on this topic for the first time and/or who would like to enrich their knowledge by referring to key cases and other publications in the area.’ -- Eugenio Vaccari, International Company and Commercial Law Review‘This latest addition to the very impressive oeuvre of Prof. Reinhard Bork in the field of (cross-border) insolvency law provides a comprehensive, clear and convincing treatise of issues relevant in a cross-border insolvency context. Bork addresses matters of jurisdiction, applicable law, recognition, cooperation and coordination, secondary proceedings, the position of foreign creditors in domestic proceedings and group insolvencies on the basis of both the European Insolvency Regulation and the UNCITRAL Model Law on Cross-Border Insolvency. It is a “must read” for everyone working in or studying insolvency law. I am convinced that it will find its way to and benefit practitioners and scholars around the globe.’ -- P.M. (Michael) Veder, Radboud University, the Netherlands
£21.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd The Responsible Shareholder
Book SynopsisExamining the role of shareholders in modern companies, this timely book argues that more should be expected of shareholders, both morally and legally. It explores the privileged position of shareholders within the corporate law system and the unique rights and duties awarded to them in contrast to other corporate actors. Introducing the concept of shareholders as responsible agents whose actions and inactions should be judged on that basis, Stephen Bottomley unites a number of distinct corporate governance discussions including stewardship, activism and shareholder liability.The Responsible Shareholder argues that when companies cause harm to the environment, inflict injury on workers, or commit financial fraud, it is not just the actions of the directors, managers, advisers or regulators that should be scrutinized. Instead of consigning shareholders to a passive or marginal role in the drive for greater corporate responsibility, this book recommends that it is time to hold this key constituency in the company decision-making structure accountable.Comparative and interdisciplinary, this book will be a key resource for students and scholars of corporate law and governance, business law and insolvency law. It will also be of value to company law policy makers, corporate interest groups and think tanks engaged in corporate law reform.Trade Review‘The book takes on original research questions, adopts a new methodological approach to answer them, proposes solutions graduated on their intrusiveness on the existent corporate governance paradigm, and adds a new dimension to the debate on the role of shareholders: that of responsibility. An anchorage to the existing general framework prevents the disorientation of the reader, that can navigate the interdisciplinary analysis without losing the coordinates offered by the traditional corporate law scholarship. Regardless of the extent to which shareholders will further take their place at the core of corporations in the future, this book usefully places at the centre of the intellectual debate the potential benefits that responsible shareholders can produce on the broader society.’ -- Michele Corgatelli, International and Comparative Corporate Law Journal‘This is a rigorous and scholarly book that seeks to (re)invigorate shareholders as actors capable of exercising power and influence in the corporation beyond simple concerns with the amount of their dividend or the price of their stock. Responsibility is the counterpoint to receiving benefits from the corporation in Bottomley’s analysis. Shareholders should (and he does not rule out compulsion) be encouraged to engage with corporate purpose and corporate decision-making. This engagement will increase trust and confidence in the corporation both externally and internally.’ -- Sally Wheeler, Australian National University, Australia'Shareholders throughout the world are increasingly flexing their muscles to keep companies focused on shareholder interest. But what should companies — and society — expect from shareholders? This is a question largely missing from the conventional understanding of corporations, which treats shareholders as beneficiaries of obligations but holders of none. Bottomley draws on a brilliant career’s worth of serious study to highlight the importance of the question and to develop persuasive answers.' -- Kent Greenfield, Boston College Law School, US‘Stephen Bottomley has written a serious and thoughtful book which attempts to find solutions to some of the problems we face with corporate governance by treating shareholders as responsible agents and identifying ways of promoting greater shareholder responsibility which do not rely on top-down prescription. It represents a considered, reflective and practical engagement with important issues by someone who knows the field inside out.’ -- Paddy Ireland, University of Bristol, UKTable of ContentsContents: Preface 1. Where were the shareholders? 2. Who are the shareholders? 3. Responsibility in a corporate context 4. Responsible shareholding in practice 5. Promoting shareholder responsibility 6. Compelling shareholder responsibility 7. Shareholder responsibility in context Index
£90.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Technology and Corporate Law: How Innovation
Book SynopsisThis thought-provoking book critically analyses the interaction of innovation, technology and corporate law. It highlights the impact of technology, including artificial intelligence and distributed ledger technology, on corporate governance and form, examining the extent to which technology may enhance or displace conventional theories and practices concerning corporate governance and regulation.Expert contributors from multiple jurisdictions identify themes and challenges that transcend national boundaries and confront the international community as a whole. Chapters investigate corporate form, governance democratisation resulting from the more prevalent use of technology, the introduction of new classes of stakeholders and novel fund-raising activities and the impact of technology on corporate governance and regulatory supervision. Offering theoretical, practical and policy perspectives on the integration of technology with corporate governance and regulation, it provides a key contribution to the broader debate concerning the impact of technology on modern life.This insightful book should stimulate incisive academic discourse and will be of value to students and scholars of corporate, business and technology law. It will also be of benefit to legal practitioners, regulators and policy-makers interested in technological innovation.Trade Review‘This is an illuminating legal guide to the world of self-driving corporations, AI systems as corporate board members, and all the corporate governance challenges that come from the rise of technology. As always, the law plays catch-up, as the technology runs ahead. This collection of thoughtful analyses of the issues will well serve all lawyers who are chasing the technology and attempting to keep up.’ -- Ross P Buckley, KPMG and KWM Professor of Disruptive Innovation, UNSW Sydney, Australia'The breadth of perspectives of this work on technology and corporate law is as impressive as the insightfulness of its contributions. As technology heavily impacts corporate governance practices, organisational forms and the functioning of capital markets, this book deserves its place in the library of anyone with an interest in the present and the future of corporate law.' -- Luca Enriques, Professor of Corporate Law, University of Oxford, UKTable of ContentsContents: Foreword viii Acknowledgements xii 1 Introduction to Technology and Corporate Law 1 Andrew Godwin, Pey Woan Lee and Rosemary Teele Langford PART I CORPORATE FORM 2 Viewing artificial persons in the AI age through the lens of history 21 Susan Watson PART II CORPORATE GOVERNANCE 3 The corporate board in an age of collaborative intelligence and complex risk 43 Helen Bird and Natania Locke 4 Artificial intelligence and corporate boards: some ethical implications 70 Vivienne Brand 5 Data explosion, disclosure and stepping stones 99 Rosemary Teele Langford 6 Recalibrating directors’ liabilities amidst technological flux 126 Pey Woan Lee and Susanna HS Leong PART III GOVERNANCE DEMOCRATISATION 7 Shareholder empowerment in the digital age 152 Pearlie Koh 8 The first step of a long march: dual-class company regulation and the experiment by the sci-tech and innovation board in China 178 Charlie Xiao-chuan Weng, Shangxuan Wu and Zhaohui Shen 9 Corporate governance challenges in initial coin offerings 205 Aurelio Gurrea-Martínez and Nydia Remolina 10 Corporate governance implications of equity crowdfunding 227 Steve Kourabas PART IV DATA ENHANCEMENTS AND ALTERNATIVE MODELS FOR ‘CORPORATE’ GOVERNANCE 11 Corporate disclosure in a technology-enabled world 252 Andrew Godwin 12 Keep your ‘invisible hands’ to yourself: freeing corporate governance from the cult of the ‘efficient market’ 277 David C Donald 13 The advent of decentralised autonomous business networks in the disembodied economy: a discussion on why the governance regimes of corporations and partnerships are unsuitable to them 306 Moshood Abdussalam and Mia Rahim
£121.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Research Handbook on Shareholder Inspection
Book SynopsisShareholder inspection rights form an important tool for shareholder protection. They offer shareholders seeking information private access to specific books and records of the company that are otherwise not publicly available. While there has been a discourse on the topic in some jurisdictions such as Delaware (USA), it has not received scholarly treatment at an international level. This Research Handbook seeks to alter that, and signifies the first endeavor to engage in a comprehensive and comparative analysis of shareholder inspection rights across 19 different jurisdictions representing five continents.Themes emerging from the study include the historical evolution of inspection rights, the statutory design of the inspection regime, how inspection rights interact with disclosure norms under securities regulation, and the manner in which inspection rights are actually utilized by shareholders. While there is some commonality among jurisdictions, the larger story is one of divergence, which is understandable since local needs tend to drive the design and operation of the regime.The Research Handbook on Shareholder Inspection Rights is invaluable to academics, scholars, and students working in the area of corporate law and governance, legal practitioners working in corporate law and, in particular, shareholder litigation and regulators and government bodies overseeing the corporate sector, including corporate and securities regulators.Trade Review‘This volume brings together experts from around the world to undertake the first systematic comparative analysis of shareholder inspection rights, which are an important element in corporate governance and shareholder litigation. Given the increase in shareholder participation, stewardship and activism globally, the volume is of immense relevance to scholars and practitioners of corporate law and governance.’ -- GUO Li, Peking University Law School, ChinaTable of ContentsContents: 1 Introduction to the Research Handbook on Shareholder Inspection Rights 1 Randall S. Thomas, Paolo Giudici and Umakanth Varottil PART I THE UNITED KINGDOM 2 United Kingdom historical viewpoint 20 Jonathan Hardman 3 Shareholder Inspection Rights in the UK: hotchpotch provision and information deficits 40 Brenda Hannigan PART II CONTINENTAL EUROPE 4 Shareholder inspection rights in Belgium: unpopular or unnecessary? 70 Hans De Wulf 5 Shareholders’ inspection and investigation rights in France 100 Pierre-Henri Conac 6 Information rights of shareholders in German company law 121 Christoph Teichmann 7 Inspection rights in Italy 140 Paolo Giudici 8 Inspection rights in Spain 150 María Gutiérrez Urtiaga and Maribel Sáez Lacave 9 Shareholder inspection rights in Sweden and the Nordic Countries 171 Jan Andersson 10 Right of information and right of inspection in the Netherlands 186 Christoph Van der Elst PART III THE AMERICAS 11 The paradox of Delaware’s “Tools at Hand” Doctrine: an empirical investigation 205 James D. Cox, Kenneth J. Martin, and Randall S. Thomas 12 Addendum: recent developments in the “tools at hand” doctrine 249 James D. Cox and Randall S. Thomas 13 Alternative entity inspection rights 258 Peter Molk 14 Shareholder investigation rights in Canada: a balancing of competing interests 272 Poonam Puri 15 Shareholders’ inspection rights in Colombia 289 Francisco Reyes Villamizar 16 Inspection rights and the Brazilian Law of Corporations 307 Marcelo Godke Veiga and Marcelo Vieira von Adamek PART IV ASIA AND AUSTRALIA 17 Shareholder inspection rights in Australia: then and now 323 Tim Bowley and Jennifer G. Hill 18 Shareholder inspection rights in China: law and practice 343 Robin Hui Huang 19 Over-disclosure in Hong Kong? The role of shareholder inspection rights in a competitive IFC 361 David C. Donald 20 Shareholder inspection rights in India: restricted scope and diminished effect 377 Umakanth Varottil and Neha Joshi 21 Shareholder inspection rights in Japan: a segmented multiple-track approach 396 Gen Goto 22 Shareholder inspection rights in Korea: law and practice from a comparative perspective 412 Kon Sik Kim 23 Limited shareholder inspection rights in Singapore: worrying legal gap or unnecessary for rankings? 430 Dan W. Puchniak and Samantha S. Tang Index
£210.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd American Business Bankruptcy: A Primer
Book SynopsisThe second edition of the first and only concise introduction to American business insolvency law, this volume provides a succinct overview of American business bankruptcy as it is actually practiced, integrating the law as written and implemented, and now includes coverage of the Small Business Reorganization Act.American Business Bankruptcy explores specialized proceedings like brokerage liquidations, pre-packaged chapter 11 cases, and 363 sales. Professor Lubben also reviews the transnational aspects of modern American bankruptcy practice, and explains chapter 15 of the Bankruptcy Code, which allows for foreign insolvency proceedings to be ‘recognized’ in U.S. courts.U.S law students and junior attorneys, international insolvency professionals, and non-legal professionals, including bankers and accountants, will appreciate this practical synthesis, which includes citations and guidance for further research.Trade Review‘The author’s second edition of his primer on American Business Bankruptcy provides a concise and accessible description of the key chapters of the US Bankruptcy Code. This book would be quite useful to students of insolvency law and indeed anyone who wishes to develop a working knowledge of the key aspects of the American insolvency framework. It is direct and clear, while also providing enough depth and discussion that it would also be useful from a comparative perspective. It is a very practical synthesis which, in the second edition, integrates the recent Small Business Reorganisation Act.’ -- Jennifer L.L. Gant, eurofenix‘Stephen Lubben has provided the go-to overview of the American business bankruptcy system. American Business Bankruptcy is the ideal book for anyone looking to understand the overall design of business restructuring in the United States.’ -- Adam Levitin, Georgetown University Law Center, USTable of ContentsContents: Preface PART I BUSINESS BANKRUPTCY BASICS 1. Some historical context 2. The central core of business bankruptcy – section 109 PART II ELEMENTS COMMON TO ALL BUSINESS BANKRUPTCIES 3. The estate and the automatic stay 4. Creditors’ claims against the estate 5. Executory contracts and unexpired leases 6. The avoidance powers PART III LIQUIDATION UNDER CHAPTER 7. An introduction to chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code 8. The chapter 7 trustee 9. Distributing the chapter 7 estate 10. Special chapter 7 cases PART IV REORGANIZATION UNDER CHAPTER 11 11. An introduction to chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code 12. Stabilizing the debtor’s business in chapter 11 13. Committees 14. Professionals 15. The plan – formulation and voting 16. The plan – confirmation (consensual) 17. The plan – confirmation (cramdown) 18. 363 sales 19. Prepacks 20. The effects of plan confirmation 21. Small businesses in chapter 11 PART V TRANSNATIONAL BUSINESS BANKRUPTCY UNDER CHAPTER 22. An introduction to chapter 15 of the Bankruptcy Code Index
£90.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd A Research Agenda for Corporate Law
Book SynopsisElgar Research Agendas outline the future of research in each area. Leading scholars are given the space to explore their subject in provocative ways and map out the potential directions of travel. They are relevant but also visionary.This timely Research Agenda explores key dynamics and cutting-edge developments within corporate law. Bringing together a diverse range of scholars hailing from different jurisdictions, ideological perspectives, and methodological backgrounds, it provides a roadmap for future research in the field.Through the investigation of different doctrinal and normative issues, leading scholars consider how evolving conceptual foundations, capital markets, social and cultural contexts, and technologies may impact corporate law and governance research. Ground-breaking contributions examine the increasingly global nature of corporate production and investment markets and the influence this has on the wider dynamics in the fields, suggesting new directions for navigating this complex and fascinating terrain.Students and scholars of corporate law, corporate governance, and law and business will value the innovative ideas unpacked in this state-of-the-art Research Agenda. Its forward looking and practical insights will also benefit practitioners and policymakers in corporate law, corporate governance, sustainability, and business law. and economics.Trade Review‘Bruner and Moore bring a new generation of scholars from around the world together to challenge the underlying assumptions behind much of the prior literature on corporate governance, and offer glimpses into the future of this 1000-year old institution. This is a fascinating and eye-opening collection!’ -- Margaret M. Blair, Vanderbilt University Law School, US‘At a time of accelerated change, A Research Agenda for Corporate Law presents a cutting-edge exploration of the evolving conceptual foundations of corporate law and of the global dynamics and the economic, technological, social and cultural contexts that are currently reshaping it. Featuring contributions from leading scholars in the field, the book sets out a research agenda for the study of corporate law, reflecting the complexity and dynamism of the field. It offers an essential resource for researchers, students, and policymakers seeking to understand and navigate the changing landscape of corporate law.’ -- Luca Enriques, University of Oxford, UK‘The world is changing, fast, and theorizing about corporate law might well be too. For those who want to know what direction corporate law theory is heading, this stimulating collection of essays by academics in the vanguard of corporate law scholarship is the place to start.’ -- Brian Cheffins, University of Cambridge, UKTable of ContentsContents: 1 Formulating a research agenda for corporate law 1 Christopher M. Bruner and Marc Moore PART I EVOLVING CONCEPTUAL FOUNDATIONS 2 Atomising corporate law: a battle cry for splitters 15 Jonny Hardman 3 Corporate law coasting in neutral: from egalitarianism, to sustainability, to extinction? 35 Michael Galanis 4 Integrating sustainability into corporate governance 57 Andrew Johnston PART II EVOLVING CAPITAL MARKETS 5 Dual fiduciaries: unicorns, corporate law and the new frontier 83 Anat Alon-Beck 6 The governance of entrepreneurship 101 Ofer Eldar 7 Sustainable finance and the public turn in corporate law 121 Virginia Harper Ho PART III EVOLVING SOCIAL AND CULTURAL CONTEXTS 8 An anti-racist feminist agenda for sustainable corporate law 143 Carol Liao 9 Diversity and ESG: implications for M&A 163 Afra Afsharipour PART IV EVOLVING TECHNOLOGIES 10 Decentralised finance, decentralised organisations and the future of the firm 187 Ann Sofie Cloots 11 Harnessing the collective power of retail investors 207 Sergio Alberto Gramitto Ricci and Christina M. Sautter PART V EVOLVING GLOBAL DYNAMICS 12 Global corporate charter competition 231 William J. Moon 13 The symbiosis between corporate governance and international law 251 Kish Parella PART VI CONCLUSIONS 14 Corporate law in changing times 273 Marc Moore and Christopher M. Bruner Index 279
£115.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd The Structure of Regulation: Explaining Why
Book SynopsisThis timely and original book provides an exploration of the factors that combine to determine the form of regulatory problems and the overall success or failure of regulation. Using environmental regulation as a basis for analysis, this book puts forward a theoretical framework for the design of effective regulation and demonstrates how businesses’ compliance with environmental regulation, in particular, could be improved.The authors address previous shortcomings in regulatory explanations, which have frequently overlooked the structural character of regulation and underplayed how the factors involved work together to determine regulatory shape and performance. In seeking to address this deficit, the authors develop a compliance line to demonstrate how different choices on how to regulate will affect compliance outcomes. Chapters include a review of how regulation has changed and sought to improve over the years, the relationship between rule following and regulation, how regulation incorporates and relies on necessary conditions, an identification of the trade-offs involved in regulating, and a discussion of why regulation is, by necessity and to a degree, unfair.Providing theories for how regulation can be structured to improve compliance, The Structure of Regulation will be a key resource for students and academics in the fields of law and regulation, environment studies, public policy and political science.Trade Review'The Structure of Regulation delivers a fresh look at regulation and compliance. While keeping one foot solidly planted in conventional accounts of regulation, it takes a substantial step forward by integrating a thoughtful perspective on firm decision-making with a rich conception of regulatory structure. After carefully setting the theoretical stage and mapping the trade-offs presented in crafting regulation that aims for compliance, the book offers a cogent minmax methodology for regulatory design. It is nuanced but clear; provocative yet balanced.' -- Timothy Malloy, UCLA School of Law, US‘A novel analysis of regulatory compliance is on offer in this book. It relates to firms and regulation in ways that might be expected but also in ways that are revealing. A fine contribution.’ -- John Braithwaite, Australia National UniversityTable of ContentsContents: 1. Introduction to The Structure of Regulation 2. Regulation 3. Regulation and rule following 4. Conditions of regulation 5. A revised view of regulation 6. Structural exclusion References Index
£78.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Novel Beings: Regulatory Approaches for a Future
Book SynopsisNovel Beings is a forward-looking exploration into the divide between proactive and reactive regulatory approaches to the cross-section of biotechnology and artificial intelligence (AI) research. Addressing an innovative area of academic study, Novel Beings questions how this research, which has the potential to create new forms of morally valuable life, could be regulated. This fascinating book examines the promises and perils of conflicting approaches to regulating emerging technologies in the unique context of this probable challenge for law and society. An impressive, and multidisciplinary, selection of expert contributors offer considerations vital to any attempt to address these issues before they become impossible to prevent or rectify. Chapters explore technologies such as genomics, synthetic biology and neurotechnologies, as well the profusion of ‘expert systems’ – algorithms and simple AI that interweave through everyday life, from smart assistants, to the financial markets, to social media. David Lawrence and Sarah Morley also discuss the global challenges for society and the laws regarding the status of these technological beings, their protections and obligations.This book will appeal to researchers and academics who are interested in the regulation of emerging technology. It will also provide a beneficial new resource for scholars and postgraduate students studying emerging technology in different fields, such as law, bioethics and philosophy.Trade Review‘As technologies lead inexorably to the creation of intelligent beings, the need to find practical solutions to questions of moral value, status, and resulting obligations becomes increasingly urgent. This important collection depicts challenges and marks a significant advancement in the field of biolaw in its articulation of potential proactive and reactive regulatory solutions.’ -- Emma G. Cave, Durham University, UK‘I warmly welcome this exciting new book on how the law, ethics and regulation can respond to the challenges of “novel beings” from biotechnology to artificial intelligence. This is an excellent group of leading scholars in law and ethics, with exciting new insights into emerging technologies.’ -- Richard Ashcroft, City, University of London, UKTable of ContentsContents: Introduction 1 PART I PROACTIVE REGULATION 1 Embedded ethics as preparatory regulation of technology: a new solution to the Collingridge Dilemma? 12 Daniel Tigard 2 Repugnance, denial, and fear: societal challenges for regulation of novel beings 29 David R. Lawrence 3 Morally significant technology: a case against mere corporate self-regulation 46 Sarah Morley 4 Beware Oz the Great and Powerful: sci-fi determinism, flawed artificial intelligence and emerging regulatory frameworks 83 Alan Dignam 5 Newer technologies, older attitudes, and retrograde regulation 124 David R. Lawrence and John Harris PART II REACTIVE REGULATION 6 Being novel? Regulating emerging technologies under conditions of uncertainty 140 Joseph T.F. Roberts and Muireann Quigley 7 The “ethical” regulation of “novel being” technologies: the potential role for patents as ethical drivers, blockers and guiders? 171 Aisling McMahon 8 A phased approach to protection of artificial beings 194 Colin Gavaghan and Mike King 9 Concluding remarks 223 Index
£104.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Broker-Dealer Compliance: A Case-based Guide to
Book SynopsisBroker-Dealer Compliance is a concise yet comprehensive guide that reviews the state of broker-dealer compliance, both from general and practical perspectives. While the book has a practical focus, it also makes use of legal scholarship and behavioral and organizational literature on compliance that have grown exponentially in recent years.James Fanto discusses the main, well-established elements and practices in a broker-dealer compliance program and illustrates them with case studies and practical examples drawn from real-life situations to demonstrate the goals of a particular program element and problems in its implementation. Moreover, each chapter highlights the pressures on compliance officers and the trends that collectively may transform compliance practice in a particular area.Professionals in broker-dealer and investment firm compliance practice will find this book a readable introduction to the field. Experienced practitioners can refresh their knowledge and even learn something new about brokerage compliance program elements and practices.Trade Review‘Jim Fanto gives readers a readable, sophisticated and practical guide for all those trying to find their way through the maze of contemporary compliance, including best practices and traps for the unwary.’ -- Donald Langevoort, Georgetown University Law Center, US‘James Fanto has written a comprehensive and exceedingly accessible book on the topic of broker-dealer compliance. Professor Fanto is extraordinarily well-situated to address this topic, having served as a reporter on the American Law Institute’s Principles of Compliance project. The book clearly articulates the applicable rules and regulations, illustrating the key points with helpful case studies. It will be an indispensable reference work for those involved or interested in the field.’ -- Claire Hill, University of Minnesota Law School, USTable of ContentsContents: Preface 1. Introduction: why broker-dealer compliance? 2. Compliance risk management 3. Compliance policies and procedures 4. Compliance training 5. Compliance advice, ethics, and culture 6. Compliance monitoring and surveillance 7. Compliance investigations 8. Evaluation of the compliance program 9. Specialized compliance in broker-dealers 10. Compliance officer’s relationship with regulators 11. Reflections on the future of broker-dealer compliance Selected and annotated bibliography Index
£100.64
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd A Research Agenda for Organizational Law
Book SynopsisElgar Research Agendas outline the future of research in a given area. Leading scholars are given the space to explore their subject in provocative ways, and map out the potential directions of travel. They are relevant but also visionary.Taking stock of the quiet revolution that has taken place in the field of organizational law over the last few decades, this erudite Research Agenda presents a critical overview of the current state of organizational law and explores the increasingly flexible structures and capabilities of modern organizations. Explaining and evaluating new possibilities in modern organizational law, the book demonstrates that legal organizations are much more generative than widely recognized, with the capacity to enable new configurations that combine several legal transactional techniques. Chapters consider the implications of this flexibility for monitoring, regulation, and reform, examine the effects of modern transactional creativity on the rest of the legal system, suggest how organizational statutes might be harmonized, introduce non-traditional uses of modern organizations like LLCs, and propose novel ways to regulate organizations. The book ultimately highlights that the formlessness and adaptability of modern legal organizations is the foundation for a significant body of future research on the evolving role of legal entities. This path-breaking Research Agenda will prove invaluable to academics and students of company law, partnership law, and agency law, as well as transactional lawyers and analysts of organizations in other fields. Its extensive critical analysis will benefit all those who use, study, and regulate modern legal organizations.Trade Review‘Organisations are at the heart of private law. This book takes an inspiring new look at them - broader and more fundamental than ever before, and from a highly innovative transactional perspective. Shawn Bayern has achieved nothing less than a rediscovery of the anatomy of organisations: A must read, especially for corporate lawyers!’ -- Florian Möslein, Philipps University of Marburg, Germany‘In A Research Agenda for Organizational Law, Professor Bayern takes a fresh look at relatively entrenched legal doctrine: the law of business associations. He finds this body of law significant, complex, and (in certain aspects) suboptimal. His precise, clear, suggestions for reform are responsive and realizable. A worthy read for policy makers, business law academics, and lawyers alike.’ -- Joan Heminway, The University of Tennessee, US‘Bayern is the Lewis Carrol of corporate law. Each step in the argument is commonsensical, but the journey somehow leads you through the looking glass. Take private ordering for example. LLCs have proliferated in recent years, even as courts have allowed waiver of once-mandatory corporate law rules. The virtue of this system is flexibility and its vice is that vulnerable individuals may find it even harder to protect their interests, right? Bayern shows the opposite, how the contractualization of organizational law may lead to a hardening of organizational structures – often to the benefit of the least powerful members of our society.’ -- Andrew Verstein, UCLA School of Law, USTable of ContentsContents: Preface Acknowledgements xv List of Abbreviations—Dramatis Personae 1 Introduction to modern organizational law 2 Harmony and disharmony in organizational law 3 The possibilities of modern legal organizations 4 The consequences of modern legal organizations 5 Regulating modern legal organizations Index
£85.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd The Harmonisation of Transaction Avoidance in the
Book SynopsisThis timely book offers a comprehensive exploration of the issue of transaction avoidance in the European Union (EU). Contributing to the formation of harmonised avoidance rules in the EU, it analyses the existing transaction avoidance regimes in cross-border scenarios as provided by the Recast European Insolvency Regulation and other EU regulations. Combining a private international law approach with substantive rules of transaction avoidance to improve the EU insolvency system, Oriana Casasola examines the theoretical framework of transaction avoidance and harmonisation. Comparing the avoidance actions available within and outside of the insolvency proceedings in England, Germany and Italy, chapters propose an alternative harmonisation of the transaction avoidance rules which fits within the current EU private international law framework. The book concludes by addressing the European Commission’s Directive for the harmonisation of certain aspects of insolvency law and evaluates the possible issues emerging from the proposed rules. Offering solutions for harmonisation of existing transaction avoidance regimes, this book will be essential reading for students and scholars of company and insolvency law, corporate law and governance, and EU law. It will also be beneficial for legal practitioners and policymakers interested in international insolvency law.Trade Review‘This is a clear and insightful discussion of transaction avoidance provisions in insolvencies. There is a detailed comparative analysis of avoidance laws in three major European jurisdictions, as well as a suggested original approach that might be adopted to most effectively address transaction avoidance in the EU, stopping short of full harmonisation.’ -- Rebecca Parry, Nottingham Trent University, UK‘Rules on the avoidance of transactional avoidance are critical in any insolvency law system. Dr Casasola has produced a carefully researched and timely work which will be of much value to anyone considering transactional avoidance in the European Union. The book is made even more timely by the European Commission’s proposals for a Directive that will include the harmonisation of transaction avoidance provisions. The book helpfully examines these proposals.’ -- Andrew Keay, University of Leeds, UK‘A fascinating study of transaction avoidance law within the context of insolvency in Europe. Examines in detail English, German and Italian law and points to differences and similarities in the respective legal systems. Critically considers the backdrop to recent EU harmonisation endeavours in the field and addresses how these efforts may end up multiplying rather than eliminating differences. Fully referenced and thorough in its treatment of sources.’ -- Gerard McCormack, University of Leeds, UKTable of ContentsContents: 1. Introduction to the Harmonisation of Transaction Avoidance in the EU 2. Definitions and Theoretical Framework of Transaction Avoidance and Harmonisation 3. The European Union Approach to Cross-Border Insolvency and Avoidance Actions: Issues within the Current Framework 4. A Comparative Analysis of Insolvency Transaction Avoidance of England, Germany and Italy 5. A Comparative Analysis of Private Law Transaction Avoidance Claims of England, Germany and Italy 6. The Harmonisation of Transaction Avoidance Addendum: the proposal for a directive of the European parliament and of the council harmonising certain aspects of insolvency law Index
£90.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd The Shareholder Rights Directive II: A Commentary
Book SynopsisThis Commentary is the first comprehensive work to analyse the revised EU Shareholder Rights Directive (SRD II). SRD II sets a new agenda for engaged shareholders and sustainable companies in the EU, sparking a wider debate on the adoption of duties in company and capital markets law. By providing a systematic and thorough framework for analysis, this Commentary evaluates the purpose and aims of SRD II and further enriches the debate on the usefulness of the EU’s drive to encourage long-term shareholder engagement.Key features include: article-by-article analysis of each of the provisions as adopted in the revised SRD II contribution to the ongoing discussions on shareholder rights and duties anticipated to be at the centre of debate for years to come detailed explanation by leading scholars in the field to ensure complete understanding of each SRD II provision for the reader exploration of the two pillars of shareholder engagement: the facilitation of shareholder rights and improved communication to bridge procedural gaps and implementation of transparency obligations applicable to companies, investors and service providers. This Commentary will be a key resource for legal practitioners, legislators, scholars and students alike, working in the fields of corporate governance, alternative dispute resolution and financial law.Trade Review'The Shareholder Rights Directive II has Europeanised important aspects of corporate governance, including reporting requirements of institutional investors, executive compensation, and related-party transactions. This book provides the most comprehensive and detailed analysis of the Directive to date. It will serve well anyone interested in the policies underlying the Directive, its interpretation, and its historical genesis.' -- Martin Gelter, Fordham University, US'Shareholders are vital to European corporate governance, but they can only deliver with an appropriate legal framework. This Commentary is a must-read for anyone interested in corporate governance and the role of shareholders in ensuring sustainable corporate growth. It provides the first in-depth authoritative analysis of the new provisions of the SRD II and on their impact on different European legal traditions. An invaluable guidance based on a comprehensive and systematic reading of the revised regulatory framework.' -- Carmine Di Noia, CONSOB, Italy'A valuable and insightful book on the interpretation of shareholder engagement and accountability roles in the Shareholder Rights Directive 2017. The expert authors provide detailed and critical analyses which raise important questions about the clarity and effectiveness of the provisions.' -- Iris H-Y Chiu, University College London, UKTable of ContentsContents: PART I INTRODUCTION 1. SRD II: Political ambitions and regulatory rationales 2 Hanne S. Birkmose and Konstantinos Sergakis 2. Articles 1 and 2: Scope and definitions 18 Marina B. Madsen PART II IDENTIFICATION OF SHAREHOLDERS, TRANSMISSION OF INFORMATION AND FACILITATION OF EXERCISE OF SHAREHOLDER RIGHTS 3. Article 3a: Identification of shareholders 42 Matteo Gargantini 4. Article 3b: Transmission of information 74 Corrado Malberti 5. Article 3c–3f: Facilitation of the exercise of shareholder rights 104 Alessio Bartolacelli PART III TRANSPARENCY OF INSTITUTIONAL INVESTORS, ASSET MANAGERS AND PROXY ADVISORS 6. Article 3g: Engagement policy 143 Hanne S. Birkmose 7. Article 3h: Investment strategy of institutional investors and arrangements with asset managers 164 Hanne S. Birkmose 8. Article 3i: Transparency of asset managers 187 Suren Gomtsian 9. Article 3j: Transparency of proxy advisors 219 Julia Anna Mayer and Ulrich Torggler 10. Article 3k: Review 246 Hanne S. Birkmose PART IV REMUNERATION OF DIRECTORS 11. Article 9a and 9b: Say on pay 250 Anne Lafarre and Christoph Van der Elst PART V TRANSPARENCY AND APPROVAL OF RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS 12. Article 9c: Transparency and approval of related party transactions 286 Marcello Bianchi and Mateja Milicˇ PART VI PENALTIES 13. Article 14a and 14b: Enforcement of SRD II provisions 320 Alessio Bartolacelli, Marcello Bianchi, Hanne S. Birkmose, Matteo Gargantini, Suren Gomtsian, Anne Lafarre, Corrado Malberti, Julia Anna Mayer, Mateja Milic, Konstantinos Sergakis, Ulrich Torggler and Christoph Van der Elst Index 351
£170.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Innovating Business for Sustainability:
Book SynopsisChallenging current attitudes to governance and regulation in business, this timely book ascertains how regulatory approaches can innovate to ensure sustainable business that contributes to social justice for current and future generations within ecological limits.Combining a research-based approach with a gendered perspective of how sustainability goals are shaped and how businesses should engage with them, this pioneering book creates a comprehensive and contemporary understanding of what sustainability means for business. Identifying the limitations of current approaches to gender and equality alongside the weaknesses of current regulatory and theoretical approaches in business, chapters seek to enhance the practical understanding and embeddedness of sustainability into business within legal and regulatory landscapes. Insights from an international collection of expert scholars in fields ranging from sustainability science to law offer meaningful alternatives to the sustainable business status quo on both conceptual and concrete levels.Providing a regulatory analysis of business positioned in a systems-based sustainability research framework, this book will prove an invaluable resource for students and scholars of sustainability science, business and management, and law and regulation. With practical insights, it will also prove essential for policymakers working in business regulation and sustainability in business.Trade Review‘This work belies the adage “Never judge a book by its cover” because the cover is inspiring and so is material within.’ -- Nordic Journal of International Law‘Innovating Business for Sustainability is an ambitious book that successfully questions business-paradigms and offers concrete, well thought out methods to implement sustainability in the modern business world. . . an important steppingstone in not just innovating business for sustainability but innovating the economic way of thinking around the globe.’ -- LEAD journal‘Existing corporate sustainability practices and regulatory approaches may no longer be fit for purpose for our COVID-19 world and beyond. Innovating Business for Sustainability not only captures the zeitgeist, its contributors do so in a reflective work of real scholarship which conveys the urgency of the challenge, bringing to bear thought-provoking fresh angles that frame and advance the field against the backdrop of a global pandemic.’ -- Deirdre Ahern, Trinity College Dublin, Ireland‘There is growing recognition that the interconnected global crises we face require urgent reforms to the conduct of business, yet the nature and extent of such reforms remain hotly debated. This essential volume compellingly argues that we must embed the concept of sustainability at the very heart of corporate law, and the authors’ expert analyses challenge us to rethink prevailing regulatory approaches in light of the gendered nature of existing structures and the complexity of social-ecological systems.’ -- Christopher Bruner, University of Georgia School of Law, US‘The circular economy, corporate social responsibility, green finance, and other proliferating concepts in the corporate landscape speak to the importance of embedding greater environmental sensitivity in business practice. This timely, cosmopolitan volume provides, through the voices of female scholars, valuable insights into adapting business governance to the upheavals of the Anthropocene. Professors Sjåfjell, Liao and Argyrou offer a superb, landmark contribution to theoretical and empirical knowledge in this field.’ -- Benjamin J. Richardson, University of Tasmania, AustraliaTable of ContentsContents: Preface x Foreword xii 1 Innovating business for a sustainable post-pandemic future 1 Carol Liao, Beate Sjåfjell and Aikaterini Argyrou PART I SUSTAINABILITY, GENDER AND THE ROLE OF BUSINESS 2 We need to talk about gender in the ‘safe operating space for humanity’ 18 Sarah E. Cornell 3 Systems thinking and the law in the age of the Anthropocene 48 Hanna Ahlström 4 The problem with selling gender equality as business innovation 67 Roseanne Russell PART II REGULATORY APPROACHES TO INNOVATING SUSTAINABLE BUSINESS 5 Superannuation funds and corporate sustainability in Australia 89 Vijaya Nagarajan and Ann Wardrop 6 Sustainability and implementation of the Non-Financial Reporting Directive in the United Kingdom, Germany and Spain 115 Isabel Άlvarez Vega and Charlotte Villiers 7 The shortcomings of regulating transparency for sustainable development in African mining 142 Sara Ghebremusse 8 How legal and tax support can reinforce the innovative and inclusive power of social enterprises 165 Pjotr Anthoni, Aikaterini Argyrou and Tineke Lambooy PART III RECONCEPTUALIZING THEORY, LAW AND GOVERNANCE 9 Can the modern corporation operate sustainably? 190 Susan Watson 10 Resilient corporate agents 210 Yue S. Ang 11 Regulation by litigation on the path to sustainable corporations 231 Carol Liao 12 Re-embedding the corporation in society and on our planet 255 Beate Sjåfjell 13 Corporate law and sustainability in a reimagined post-pandemic world 283 Carol Liao, Beate Sjåfjell and Aikaterini Argyrou Index
£114.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd The Interpretation and Value of Corporate Rescue
Book SynopsisThis incisive book critically explores the principles, purpose and application of corporate rescue in order to bring new significance to rescue theory. Responding to key legislative developments and recent case law, it examines major insolvency theories and establishes which theoretical principles are prominently applied in practice, and whether these principles have affected the drivers of policy consideration.John M. Wood gives unique consideration to value within a corporate failure and rescue context, focusing on the issue of identifying the value of a company and its assets so that optimal rescue outcomes can be realised. Wood provides a detailed examination of the professional discretion afforded to insolvency practitioners to determine how commercial decisions, like rescue proposals, are construed.The in-depth analysis of key cases such as Re One Blackfriars Ltd and legislation including the Corporate Insolvency and Governance Act 2020 will prove invaluable for both practitioners and policy makers exploring corporate insolvency and rescue reform. It will also be of interest to scholars and students of insolvency law, as well as company law more broadly.Trade Review‘This book makes for a valuable contribution to the growing literature on the UK corporate insolvency law regime and the efficiency of the rescue culture. In addition to presenting established theoretical approaches, this book builds upon this knowledge and develops the concept of value preservation that adds new insights to existing discussions, a wealth of detail is provided as the various themes underpinning corporate rescue are scrutinised. The publication of this book is timely as the world emerges from COVID-19 and is currently battling a “costs of living” crisis. Scholars, practitioners, or policymakers seeking to understand current UK perspectives on corporate rescue will find Wood’s insights valuable. Thus, this work deserves a place on the shelves of anyone with an interest in UK corporate insolvency and rescue law. Its accessibility will appeal to domestic, as well as international higher-education students, early career academics, as well as more senior scholars.’ -- Emilie Ghio, International Company and Commercial Law Review‘This is a timely evaluation of UK insolvency law that has a modern feel and will be important as the world emerges from Covid-19. It builds upon established theoretical approaches and adds fresh insights through development of a concept of preservation of value. It draws upon a good range of other sources, both legal and nonlegal, and will be inspiring to readers, as well as providing an excellent introduction to the subject.’ -- Rebecca Parry, Nottingham Trent University, UKTable of ContentsContents: Foreword Preface 1. Introduction to corporate rescue 2. The pursuit of a corporate rescue objective 3. Corporate insolvency law theories and the rescue endgame 4. The value within the failed company 5. The value of corporate rescue 6. The interpretation of rescue and its value 7. The role of the courts and their input in rescue proceedings 8. Rescue in practice Index
£94.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Start-up Law
Book SynopsisThis comprehensive Practical Guide provides direction on the wide array of legal questions and challenges that start-ups face. Start-up Law features analysis from five jurisdictions that represent a variety of legal traditions across different continents. Expert contributors address key legal issues for technology-based start-ups and entrepreneurs, as well as providing insights into the law and practice of the countries examined. Key features include: a focus on the complete life cycle of a start-up, from innovative idea through growth of the business to success or failure specific, in-depth analysis of law relating to start-up businesses in Denmark, Canada, Israel, Switzerland and the United States guidance aimed at helping start-ups and entrepreneurs navigate the diverse legal and regulatory hurdles they may encounter, including practical insights from expert contributors with first hand industry experience. Start-up Law will prove crucial reading for lawyers advising technology start-ups, as well as entrepreneurs themselves in this sector. It will also be useful for scholars and students in business and commercial law, as well as policy-makers interested in providing a supportive regulatory environment for innovation and start-ups.Trade Review‘Start-up Law provides a broad overview of the key legal questions that young companies are required to master, doing so in comprehensive language, understandable by non-practitioners. It particularly addresses the need for start-up companies to look outside their own borders to benefit from the various opportunities of global jurisdictions. For anyone who is either starting a company or looking to expand to one of the covered jurisdictions, this resource will help you save a lot of valuable time and legal fees.' -- Matthieu Guiessaz, Blockchain Valley Ventures, SwitzerlandTable of ContentsContents: Part I – Introduction and Importance of Start-ups 1. Introduction Alexandra Andhov 2. Importance of Start-ups for our Legal Systems Alexandra Andhov Part II - Jurisdictions 3. Canada Oleg Stratiev 4. Denmark Alexandra Andhov, Jakob Wested and Rasmus Kristian Feldthusen 5. Israel Ehud Kamar, Ayal Shenhav and Shay Yanovsky 6. Switzerland Michèle Ineczka Kappeler and Luigi Bruno 7. The United States Drew Amerson and Alice Armitage Index
£121.41
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Start-up Law
Book SynopsisThis comprehensive Practical Guide provides direction on the wide array of legal questions and challenges that start-ups face. Start-up Law features analysis from five jurisdictions that represent a variety of legal traditions across different continents. Expert contributors address key legal issues for technology-based start-ups and entrepreneurs, as well as providing insights into the law and practice of the countries examined. Key features include: a focus on the complete life cycle of a start-up, from innovative idea through growth of the business to success or failure specific, in-depth analysis of law relating to start-up businesses in Denmark, Canada, Israel, Switzerland and the United States guidance aimed at helping start-ups and entrepreneurs navigate the diverse legal and regulatory hurdles they may encounter, including practical insights from expert contributors with first hand industry experience. Start-up Law will prove crucial reading for lawyers advising technology start-ups, as well as entrepreneurs themselves in this sector. It will also be useful for scholars and students in business and commercial law, as well as policy-makers interested in providing a supportive regulatory environment for innovation and start-ups.Trade Review‘Start-up Law provides a broad overview of the key legal questions that young companies are required to master, doing so in comprehensive language, understandable by non-practitioners. It particularly addresses the need for start-up companies to look outside their own borders to benefit from the various opportunities of global jurisdictions. For anyone who is either starting a company or looking to expand to one of the covered jurisdictions, this resource will help you save a lot of valuable time and legal fees.' -- Matthieu Guiessaz, Blockchain Valley Ventures, SwitzerlandTable of ContentsContents: Part I – Introduction and Importance of Start-ups 1. Introduction Alexandra Andhov 2. Importance of Start-ups for our Legal Systems Alexandra Andhov Part II - Jurisdictions 3. Canada Oleg Stratiev 4. Denmark Alexandra Andhov, Jakob Wested and Rasmus Kristian Feldthusen 5. Israel Ehud Kamar, Ayal Shenhav and Shay Yanovsky 6. Switzerland Michèle Ineczka Kappeler and Luigi Bruno 7. The United States Drew Amerson and Alice Armitage Index
£68.35
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Company Law in the New Europe: The EU Acquis,
Book SynopsisThis book provides comprehensive analysis of the recent enlargement of the EU, shedding light on the rationale behind the EU's decisions to enlarge, examining the side effects these choices have on a range of EU policies and particularly on the effect of the Acquis on candidate countries. Emphasis is placed on the area of company law, which occupies a central part in a country's economic planning and therefore its commercial law. Past enlargements are thoroughly explained and the potential impact of the new political landscape in Europe in the wake of the popular rejection of the European Constitutional Treaty on future enlargements is evaluated. A comparative methodology for commercial law drafting in transition and developing economies is put forward and the book concludes with a complete draft of a model company law for transition (and developing) economies. The aim is to provide a template for discussion.This book will be of great interest to those interested in considering the influence that the prospect of EU membership has on transition countries in general, the emphasis being on laws vital to emerging market economies, particularly commercial and company law.Trade Review'This study on the potential of law to ensure the social responsibility of a company is an innovative and important study. It is a topical contribution to the sociology of market economies in transition. It is a unique effort to provide detailed practical guidance for the design of the company law in developing economies in general and the "new Europe" in particular.' -- Christian Joerges, European University Institute Florence, ItalyTable of ContentsContents: Preface Part I: The Challenge of Enlargement Contents of Part I 1. The EU and the Recent Enlargement: Opportunities and Challenges 2. Enlargement: The Story So Far 3. The Criteria for Entry 4. Political and Economic Conditions for Drafting Commercial and Company Law in Transition and Developing Countries Part II: A Model Company Law for Transition Economies A Model Company Law for Transition Economies: Introduction Contents for Part II 1. Common Provisions (Arts. 1–29) 2. General Partnerships (Arts. 30–79) 3. Limited Partnerships (Arts. 80–94) 4. Joint-Stock Companies (Arts. 95–227) 5. Limited Liability Companies (Arts. 228–80) 6. Groups of Enterprises (Arts. 281–4) 7. Public Enterprises (Art. 285) 8. Restructuring of Enterprises (Arts. 286–302) 9. Penal Provisions (Arts. 303–10) 10. Transitional and Final Provisions (Arts. 311–15) Bibliography Index
£126.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd European Antitrust Law: Prohibitions, Merger
Book SynopsisThe recent modification of the European Antitrust Law system, which concerns both the substance of the prohibitions and the system of enforcement, called for a thorough re-examination of this sector. Against this background, this book offers a new and coherent organisation of the subject. It takes into consideration the changes not only to the interpretation of Articles 81 and 82 EC, but also to the procedural aspects related to Reg. 1/03. In this context, the reform of Reg. 139/04 on European merger control is also fully taken into consideration.European Antitrust Law places current EC antitrust and merger control rules in their historical context, considering both the economic foundations and guiding principles of the law. It will therefore be an invaluable and stimulating guide to EC antitrust for scholars, students and practitioners alike.Trade Review'Given the importance of European competition law and significant changes in the enforcement process. . . Professor Pace's book is a valuable addition to the literature. . . It merits a place on the bookshelf for those interested in such an examination of EU competition law.' -- Terry Calvani, Journal of Economic Literature'. . . the book with its integrated and historical approach, the critical assessment and the inclusion of the recent developments, is a book that one can wholeheartedly recommend to practitioners, scholars and students alike. . . The book is a true monograph and a valuable piece in any library.' -- Pal Bela Szilagyi, Journal of Current Legal Studies'This book provides a thoughtful, comprehensive and yet concise contribution to the competition law literature and should be of interest to students in the field in Europe and worldwide.' -- Renato Nazzini, University of Southampton, UK'The book is so comprehensive that it cannot be summarised in a few lines, precisely because it deals with the entire subject matter without shirking any of the pertinent issues. The author analyses these thoroughly and meticulously, and backs up his assertions with the appropriate legislative, jurisprudential and bibliographical references. However, what is most striking is not so much the range and variety of the subjects which the author tackles, or the sometimes punctilious accuracy of the information that he includes, but rather his enormous knowledge of the subject matter and the enthusiasm that he brings to bear to his treatment of it.' -- Antonio Tizzano, European Court of JusticeTable of ContentsContents: Preface PART I: CARTELS AND THE PROCESS OF EUROPEAN INTEGRATION 1. The Worldwide Industrialisation of the 19th Century and the ‘Cartelisation’ of the European Economy 2. The Dissolution of the Worldwide Steel Cartel and the Establishment of the ECSC System 3. The EEC and the Birth of European Competition Law PART II: EUROPEAN ANTITRUST POWERS 4. The Antitrust Powers of the EC Treaty and the Concept of Antitrust Law 5. The Goals of European Antitrust Law 6. The Characteristics of Articles 81 and 82 EC 7. The Scope of of Articles 81 and 82 EC PART III: ARTICLE 81 EC 8. The Drafting of Article 81 EC 9. The Implementation of Article 81 EC 10. The Content of Article 81 EC 11. Article 81 EC and Horizontal Agreements 12. Article 81 EC and Vertical Agreements PART IV: ARTICLE 82 EC 13. The Drafting of Article 82 EC 14. The Implementation of Article 82 EC 15. The Content of Article 82 EC 16. Article 82 EC and Exclusionary Abuses 17. Article 82 EC and Exploitative Abuses 18. Article 82 and Discriminatory Abuses PART V: ARTICLES 81 AND 82 EC APPLIED TO THE MEMBER STATES 19. The Combined Effect of Articles 10 and 81 EC 20. The Combined Effect of Article 82 and 86(1) EC 21. The Binding Nature of Unlawful National Measures and the Antitrust Liability of Private Persons and the Member States PART VI: VERTICAL ASPECTS OF EUROPEAN ANTITRUST LAW 22. European Antitrust Powers and the Principles of Subsidiarity and Proportionality 23. Principles to Resolve the Conflict between European Antitrust Law and National Laws under the EC Treaty and Regulation 1/03 PART VII: THE BODIES AND INSTITUTIONS OF THE EUROPEAN ANTITRUST ENFORCEMENT SYSTEM 24. The Commission 25. National Antitrust Authorities 26. Antitrust Federalism 27. National Courts PART VIII: THE ANTITRUST ENFORCEMENT SYSTEM ESTABLISHED BY THE EC TREATY 28. The Commission: Powers, Decisions and Penalties 29. National Antitrust Authorities: Powers, Decisions and Penalties 30. Mechanisms Allowing Cooperation between the Commission and National Antitrust Authorities 31. Mechanisms Allowing the Commission and National Antitrust Authorities to Control Each Other 32. Judicial Enforcement of Antitrust Law PART IX: THE ANTITRUST ENFORCEMENT SYSTEM ESTABLISHED BY REGULATION 1/03 33. The Evolution of the Policy of Decentralising Antitrust Law 34. The Commission: Decisions, Powers of Investigation and Penalties 35. National Antitrust Authorities: Decisions, Powers of Investigation and Penalties 36. Mechanisms Allowing Cooperation between the Commission and National Antitrust Authorities: Vertical and Horizontal Cooperation 37. Control Mechanisms Allowing the Commission and National Antitrust Authorities to Control Each Other: Vertical Descending, Peer and Vertical Ascending Control 38. Judicial Enforcement of Antitrust Law 39. Mechanisms Allowing Cooperation between the Commission and the National Courts 40. Mechanisms Allowing the Commission and National Antitrust Authorities to Monitor the Decisions of the National Courts PART X: EUROPEAN MERGER CONTROL 41. The Role of Merger Control in the EC Treaty 42. Competence in the Field of Merger Control in the EC Treaty 43. Basic Concepts of European Merger Control: The Concept of Merger, Merger Subject to Notification and Prohibited Merger 44. Allocation of European Merger Control Powers as between the Community and the Member States PART XI: THE MERGER CONTROL SYSTEM ESTABLISHED BY REGULATION 139/04 45. The Commission: Powers, Proceedings Assessing the Merger and Penalties 46. National Antitrust Authorities: Powers 47. Mechanisms Allowing Cooperation between the Commission and National Antitrust Authorities 48. Mechanisms Allowing the Commission and National Antitrust Authorities to Control Each Other Bibliography Index
£131.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Classics in Corporate Law and Economics
Book SynopsisThe spate of corporate governance scandals in the USA, Asia and Europe during the late 1990s has renewed interest in the role of corporations in society. International organizations such as the World Bank and OECD have come to recognize that corporate law plays an important role in economic development and GDP growth. In this timely and important collection, Jonathan Macey presents the key papers that have influenced the development of corporate law scholarship. The many topics covered include the foundations of the economics of corporate law, the corporation as a nexus of contracts, corporate law from a Coasean perspective, insider trading and jurisdictional competition. The articles and the editor's authoritative introduction are essential readings for those with an interest in corporate law and its economic underpinnings.Trade Review‘Jonathan Macey’s Classics in Corporate Law and Economics ties together a collection of some of the most interesting and creative writers on the subject of law and economics since its birth as a discipline. Beginning with the foundations of the economics of corporate law and a look at the Coasean perspective, the work comprises of a two-volume array of essays that provide an enlightening and in-depth consideration of the most current and essential issues in the field today. The book is a masterpiece long overdue and will surely be heralded as a “classic” in itself for a long time to come.’Table of ContentsContents: Volume I Acknowledgements Introduction Jonathan Macey PART I THE FOUNDATIONS OF THE ECONOMICS OF CORPORATE LAW 1. R.H. Coase (1937), ‘The Nature of the Firm’ 2. Michael C. Jensen and William H. Meckling (1976), ‘Theory of the Firm: Managerial Behavior, Agency Costs and Ownership Structure’ PART II THE CORPORATION AS A NEXUS OF CONTRACTS 3. Frank H. Easterbrook and Daniel R. Fischel (1989), ‘The Corporate Contract’ 4. John C. Coffee, Jr. (1989), ‘The Mandatory/Enabling Balance in Corporate Law: An Essay on the Judicial Role’ 5. Frank H. Easterbrook and Daniel R. Fischel (1986), ‘Close Corporations and Agency Costs’ PART III CORPORATE LAW FROM A COASEAN PERSPECTIVE: FIDUCIARY DUTIES, VOTING AND THE ROLE OF SHAREHOLDERS AND OTHER CONSTITUTENCIES 6. Frank H. Easterbrook and Daniel R. Fischel (1983), ‘Voting in Corporate Law’ 7. Jonathan R. Macey (1999), ‘Fiduciary Duties as Residual Claims: Obligations to Nonshareholder Constituencies from a Theory of the Firm Perspective’ 8. Jonathan R. Macey and Geoffrey P. Miller (1993), ‘Corporate Stakeholders: A Contractual Perspective’ PART IV CORPORATE LAWYERS AND OTHER “INSTITUTIONAL FEATURES” OF CORPORATE LAW 9. Oliver E. Williamson (1979), ‘Transaction-Cost Economics: The Governance of Contractual Relations’ 10. Arnoud W.A. Boot and Jonathan R. Macey (2004), ‘Monitoring Corporate Performance: The Role of Objectivity, Proximity, and Adaptability in Corporate Governance’ 11. Ronald J. Gilson (1984), ‘Value Creation by Business Lawyers: Legal Skills and Asset Pricing’ 12. Ronald J. Gilson (1996), ‘Corporate Governance and Economic Efficiency: When Do Institutions Matter?’ 13. Mark J. Roe (2002), ‘Corporate Law’s Limits’ 14. Oliver E Williamson (1988), ‘Corporate Finance and Corporate Governance’ 15. Jonathan R. Macey and Geoffrey P. Miller (1995), ‘Corporate Governance and Commercial Banking: A Comparative Examination of Germany, Japan, and the United States’ 16. Clifford W. Smith, Jr. and Jerold B. Warner (1979), ‘On Financial Contracting: An Analysis of Bond Covenants’ 17. Roberta Romano (1991), ‘The Shareholder Suit: Litigation Without Foundation?’ Name Index Volume II Acknowledgements An introduction by the editor to both volumes appears in Volume I PART I INSIDER TRADING 1. Dennis W. Carlton and Daniel R. Fischel (1983), ‘The Regulation of Insider Trading’ 2. David D. Haddock and Jonathan R. Macey (1987), ‘A Coasian Model of Insider Trading’ 3. David D. Haddock and Jonathan R. Macey (1987), ‘Regulation on Demand: A Private Interest Model, with an Application to Insider Trading Regulation’ PART II THE MARKET FOR CORPORATE CONTROL 4. Henry G. Manne (1965), ‘Mergers and the Market for Corporate Control’ 5. Frank H. Easterbrook and Daniel R. Fischel (1981), ‘The Proper Role of a Target’s Management in Responding to a Tender Offer’ 6. Lucian Arye Bebchuk, John C. Coates IV and Guhan Subramanian (2002), ‘The Powerful Antitakeover Force of Staggered Boards: Theory, Evidence, and Policy’ 7. Richard Roll (1986), ‘The Hubris Hypothesis of Corporate Takeovers’ 8. Ronald J. Gilson (1982), ‘Seeking Competitive Bids Versus Pure Passivity in Tender Offer Defense’, Stanford Law Review, 35, November, 51-67 [17] 9. Jonathan R. Macey and Fred S. McChesney (1985), ‘A Theoretical Analysis of Corporate Greenmail’ PART III JURISDICTIONAL COMPETITION FOR CORPORATE CHARTERS 10. Ralph K. Winter, Jr. (1977), ‘State Law, Shareholder Protection and the Theory of the Corporation’ 11. Roberta Romano (1985), ‘Law as a Product: Some Pieces of the Incorporation Puzzle’ 12. Jonathan R. Macey and Geoffrey P. Miller (1987), ‘Toward an Interest-Group Theory of Delaware Corporate Law’ 13. William J. Carney (1997), ‘The Political Economy of Competition for Corporate Charters’ PART IV POLITICS AND THE ECONOMICS OF CORPORATE LAW 14. John Pound (1993), ‘The Rise of the Political Model of Corporate Governance and Corporate Control’ 15. Vikramaditya S. Khanna (2004), ‘Corporate Crime Legislation: A Political Economy Analysis’ 16. Mark J. Roe (1991), ‘A Political Theory of American Corporate Finance’ Name Index
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