The corporate collapses of recent times, culminating with massive collapses such as those of Enron in the United States and HIH in Australia, have suggested to many that there are major systemic problems facing the way in which corporations and corporate governance operate. Some conduct associated with these collapses has been clearly criminal in character, such as the actions of accounting firm Anderson in shredding audit related papers after a regulatory investigation into Enron had been announced. The use of off-balance sheet structures by Enron so as to avoid adequate disclosure or transparency has also offended basic corporate governance notions. Some conduct associated with the collapse of pivotal institutions such as these have led ...