In this essay Professor Deutsch addresses the question whether the legal system can make modern corporations accountable to societal ideals. Whether one believes the modern corporation can be made amenable to the popular will through law may depend upon one\u27s conception of what defines and motivates the activities of individual citizens as members of the polity. In this context Professor Deutsch analyzes the Marxist conception of human self-definition and argues that one can understand both the persistence of corporate power and the possibility of controlling that power through law only by recognizing a richer conception of human self-definition
As the world becomes more and more automated, it is becoming increasingly important to describe and ...
Since its inception in 1855, limited liability has been described as one of the greatest inventions ...
Recent court cases such as "Citizens United" have ignited the debate about whether or not corporatio...
In this essay Professor Deutsch addresses the question whether the legal system can make modern corp...
The Politics of Law is a collection of essays from the Critical Legal Studies movement. The essentia...
The twentieth century has been the century of complex organisations. However, most contemporary poli...
Neither of the two normative theories that rest at the base of contemporary advanced societies—liber...
This dissertation explores the corporation from the perspective of normative political theory. As I ...
This article examines how, in the course of the twentieth century, legal scholars and political theo...
In the following article, Professor Deutsch considers the processes by which the common law of corpo...
This essay examines the contributions of Lisa Siraganian’s Modernism and the Meaning of Corporate Pe...
This essay provides a genealogy of corporate personhood as it exists currently in US law and places ...
This chapter contributes to the literature by developing a critical theoretical lens on business and...
This Article, written for a symposium celebrating the work of Professor Margaret Blair, examines how...
In this article, we philosophically reflect on the nature of corporate governance. We raise thequest...
As the world becomes more and more automated, it is becoming increasingly important to describe and ...
Since its inception in 1855, limited liability has been described as one of the greatest inventions ...
Recent court cases such as "Citizens United" have ignited the debate about whether or not corporatio...
In this essay Professor Deutsch addresses the question whether the legal system can make modern corp...
The Politics of Law is a collection of essays from the Critical Legal Studies movement. The essentia...
The twentieth century has been the century of complex organisations. However, most contemporary poli...
Neither of the two normative theories that rest at the base of contemporary advanced societies—liber...
This dissertation explores the corporation from the perspective of normative political theory. As I ...
This article examines how, in the course of the twentieth century, legal scholars and political theo...
In the following article, Professor Deutsch considers the processes by which the common law of corpo...
This essay examines the contributions of Lisa Siraganian’s Modernism and the Meaning of Corporate Pe...
This essay provides a genealogy of corporate personhood as it exists currently in US law and places ...
This chapter contributes to the literature by developing a critical theoretical lens on business and...
This Article, written for a symposium celebrating the work of Professor Margaret Blair, examines how...
In this article, we philosophically reflect on the nature of corporate governance. We raise thequest...
As the world becomes more and more automated, it is becoming increasingly important to describe and ...
Since its inception in 1855, limited liability has been described as one of the greatest inventions ...
Recent court cases such as "Citizens United" have ignited the debate about whether or not corporatio...