The authors studied panel data for corporate governance ratings in 50 countries between 1997 and 2005 to understand what the country-level predictors of corporate governance legitimacy might be. Using neo-institutional theory, they found that all three pillars of institutionalization influenced perceptions of corporate governance at the national level—specifically, (a) the greater the extent of law and order, (b) the more the culture emphasized global competitiveness, and (c) the less the prevalence of corruption, the higher the corporate governance legitimacy within a nation. This study refines and extends the comparative corporate governance literature, as well as the neo-institutional perspective
In the last few years, the headline news is often grabbed with massive corruption scandals implicati...
The expectation that state voice drives perceptions of the legitimacy of international institutions ...
Contemporary society has witnessed major growth in global governance, yet the legitimacy of global g...
The authors studied panel data for corporate governance ratings in 50 countries between 1997 and 200...
Economic globalization has encouraged debate on the differences and similarities between national co...
This article addresses a significant gap in the literature on legitimacy in global governance, explo...
The literature shows that good corporate governance generally pays—for firms, for mar-kets, and for ...
This study attempts to address calls to revisit the relationship between corporate governance (CG) a...
Drawing on institutional theory, we examine the impact of corporate governance (CG) on corruption. T...
In this essay, we outline an institutional approach concerning corporate governance, highlighting it...
In this study, we examine from an institutional perspective the legitimacy rationale behind the choi...
Corporate governance (CG) is often split among rule and principle based methods to regulation in dis...
We evaluate the impact of corporate governance on the valuation of firms in a large cross-section of...
Parallels between corporate governance and state governance appear to be growing. This essay focuses...
Citizens, Elites, and the Legitimacy of Global Governance offers the first full comparative study of...
In the last few years, the headline news is often grabbed with massive corruption scandals implicati...
The expectation that state voice drives perceptions of the legitimacy of international institutions ...
Contemporary society has witnessed major growth in global governance, yet the legitimacy of global g...
The authors studied panel data for corporate governance ratings in 50 countries between 1997 and 200...
Economic globalization has encouraged debate on the differences and similarities between national co...
This article addresses a significant gap in the literature on legitimacy in global governance, explo...
The literature shows that good corporate governance generally pays—for firms, for mar-kets, and for ...
This study attempts to address calls to revisit the relationship between corporate governance (CG) a...
Drawing on institutional theory, we examine the impact of corporate governance (CG) on corruption. T...
In this essay, we outline an institutional approach concerning corporate governance, highlighting it...
In this study, we examine from an institutional perspective the legitimacy rationale behind the choi...
Corporate governance (CG) is often split among rule and principle based methods to regulation in dis...
We evaluate the impact of corporate governance on the valuation of firms in a large cross-section of...
Parallels between corporate governance and state governance appear to be growing. This essay focuses...
Citizens, Elites, and the Legitimacy of Global Governance offers the first full comparative study of...
In the last few years, the headline news is often grabbed with massive corruption scandals implicati...
The expectation that state voice drives perceptions of the legitimacy of international institutions ...
Contemporary society has witnessed major growth in global governance, yet the legitimacy of global g...