This Article applies a model based on the interest-group theory of regulation to explain and predict the legal rules that affect the affairs of corporations chartered in Delaware. Two existing theories purport to explain and predict these legal rules. The traditional, reformist theory depicts Delaware as the winner of a deplorable race to the bottom in which competition among the states for franchise taxes has led Delaware to produce a system of corporate law rules that permits corporate managers to exploit shareholders for their own ends. More recently, the law and economics movement has produced a competing theory, the corporate federalist theory, which posits that the desire to obtain income from corporate charters has led Delaware a...
The state competition for corporate law has long been studied as a distinct phenomenon. Under the tr...
The corporate charter competition has dominated the corporate law literature for four decades. This ...
This article develops an empirical model of firms’ choice of corporate laws under inertia. Delaware ...
From the classic Cary-Winter debate to current legal scholarship, commentators have struggled to exp...
Despite its intense focus on inter-jurisdictional competition, corporate law scholarship has thus fa...
Among the grandest debates within corporate law is whether the dominance of Delaware is the result o...
This paper develops a model of the competition among states in providing corporate law rules. The an...
Delaware rose to preeminence in the incorporation market after a key point of inflection for corpora...
An enduring inquiry for American corporate law scholars is why the small state of Delaware dominates...
As Delaware corporate law confronts the twenty-first-century global economy, the state\u27s legislat...
Delaware inhabits a competitive landscape that includes, but is not limited to, corporate law. Like ...
This article provides a history of the legal debates over the corporate charters in the American con...
In a state where the number of registered corporate entities outnumbers the population, Delaware’s s...
This Article presents a model that can be used to explain key elements of Delaware takeover law. By ...
Part I of this Article examines the national law on shareholder rights and obligations in closely he...
The state competition for corporate law has long been studied as a distinct phenomenon. Under the tr...
The corporate charter competition has dominated the corporate law literature for four decades. This ...
This article develops an empirical model of firms’ choice of corporate laws under inertia. Delaware ...
From the classic Cary-Winter debate to current legal scholarship, commentators have struggled to exp...
Despite its intense focus on inter-jurisdictional competition, corporate law scholarship has thus fa...
Among the grandest debates within corporate law is whether the dominance of Delaware is the result o...
This paper develops a model of the competition among states in providing corporate law rules. The an...
Delaware rose to preeminence in the incorporation market after a key point of inflection for corpora...
An enduring inquiry for American corporate law scholars is why the small state of Delaware dominates...
As Delaware corporate law confronts the twenty-first-century global economy, the state\u27s legislat...
Delaware inhabits a competitive landscape that includes, but is not limited to, corporate law. Like ...
This article provides a history of the legal debates over the corporate charters in the American con...
In a state where the number of registered corporate entities outnumbers the population, Delaware’s s...
This Article presents a model that can be used to explain key elements of Delaware takeover law. By ...
Part I of this Article examines the national law on shareholder rights and obligations in closely he...
The state competition for corporate law has long been studied as a distinct phenomenon. Under the tr...
The corporate charter competition has dominated the corporate law literature for four decades. This ...
This article develops an empirical model of firms’ choice of corporate laws under inertia. Delaware ...