In The Shareholder Value Myth,1 law professor Lynn Stout pitches her tent firmly in the camp of the nascent and prematurely moribund Occupy Wall Street movement. And if contradictions abounded among Occupy Wall Street folks, they similarly flourish in this slim text. This book simultaneously argues that the idea of shareholder primacy is—in addition to being a myth—(a) “the dumbest idea in the world”;2 (b) “an ideology, not a legal requirement or a practical necessity”;3 and (c) bad law.4 My responses to these observations are: (a) shareholder primacy is not an idea at all; (b) shareholder primacy is an ideology, but like certain other ideologies, such as the ones about the Constitution being sacred or the one about God not being dead, it i...
Today, Berle is celebrated as the grandfather of modern shareholder primacy, but this description g...
The shareholder primacy norm defines the objective of the corporation as maximization of shareholder...
My conundrum question is this: suppose managerialism triumphed in the governance wars so as to regai...
In The Shareholder Value Myth,1 law professor Lynn Stout pitches her tent firmly in the camp of the ...
International audienceThe corporate governance thought has been dominated since 30 years by the shar...
By the beginning of the twenty-first century, many observers had come to believe that U.S. corporate...
The concept of unitary shareholder value and its reflection in nearterm stock prices formed the ce...
In the “shareholder primacy” (SP) view of the modern corporation, shareholders are endowed with owne...
Shareholder primacy is the most fundamental concept in corporate law and corporate governance. It is...
The fundamental assumptions of corporate law have changed little in decades. Accepted as truth are t...
Part I of this Article analyzes some of the contemporary critiques of, and debates around, sharehold...
The shareholder primacy norm is the corporate governance model prevailing in the US, the UK and some...
In 1932, the Harvard Law Review published a debate between two preeminent corporate scholars on the ...
My purpose in this paper is to examine three distinct approaches to the notion that companies should...
According to the traditional view, the shareholders own the corporation. Until relatively recently, ...
Today, Berle is celebrated as the grandfather of modern shareholder primacy, but this description g...
The shareholder primacy norm defines the objective of the corporation as maximization of shareholder...
My conundrum question is this: suppose managerialism triumphed in the governance wars so as to regai...
In The Shareholder Value Myth,1 law professor Lynn Stout pitches her tent firmly in the camp of the ...
International audienceThe corporate governance thought has been dominated since 30 years by the shar...
By the beginning of the twenty-first century, many observers had come to believe that U.S. corporate...
The concept of unitary shareholder value and its reflection in nearterm stock prices formed the ce...
In the “shareholder primacy” (SP) view of the modern corporation, shareholders are endowed with owne...
Shareholder primacy is the most fundamental concept in corporate law and corporate governance. It is...
The fundamental assumptions of corporate law have changed little in decades. Accepted as truth are t...
Part I of this Article analyzes some of the contemporary critiques of, and debates around, sharehold...
The shareholder primacy norm is the corporate governance model prevailing in the US, the UK and some...
In 1932, the Harvard Law Review published a debate between two preeminent corporate scholars on the ...
My purpose in this paper is to examine three distinct approaches to the notion that companies should...
According to the traditional view, the shareholders own the corporation. Until relatively recently, ...
Today, Berle is celebrated as the grandfather of modern shareholder primacy, but this description g...
The shareholder primacy norm defines the objective of the corporation as maximization of shareholder...
My conundrum question is this: suppose managerialism triumphed in the governance wars so as to regai...