Delaware rose to preeminence in the incorporation market after a key point of inflection for corporate law. Around the turn of the 20th century, “laissez faire” statutes signaled a shift from state regulation of corporations to private ordering and markets at a time when the decline of ultra vires, quo waranto, and regulation of foreign corporations first made it possible for a state to attract substantial incorporation business from its neighbors. The regulatory impulse of the earlier corporations statutes, however, did not disappear. It simply moved to federal law—in antitrust, securities, or labor-- setting up a strong federalism dimension for the “who makes corporate law” debate. In many ways this federalism discussion is still fram...
From the classic Cary-Winter debate to current legal scholarship, commentators have struggled to exp...
Over recent decades, shareholders in public corporations have increasingly sought to augment their o...
Jurisdictional competition in corporate law has long been a staple of academic-and sometimes, politi...
Delaware rose to preeminence in the incorporation market after a key point of inflection for corpora...
In the public debate sparked by the corporate scandals of the last years, Delaware has been striking...
Delaware is the state of incorporation for almost two-thirds of the Fortune 500 companies, as well a...
According to the standard account in American corporate law, states compete to supply corporate law ...
Delaware inhabits a competitive landscape that includes, but is not limited to, corporate law. Like ...
Delaware has a population less than one-third of one percent of the nation, but it is the state of i...
As Delaware corporate law confronts the twenty-first-century global economy, the state\u27s legislat...
An enduring inquiry for American corporate law scholars is why the small state of Delaware dominates...
The state competition for corporate law has long been studied as a distinct phenomenon. Under the tr...
Despite its intense focus on inter-jurisdictional competition, corporate law scholarship has thus fa...
A perennial issue in corporate law reform is the desirability of afederal system. For notwithstandin...
This article provides a history of the legal debates over the corporate charters in the American con...
From the classic Cary-Winter debate to current legal scholarship, commentators have struggled to exp...
Over recent decades, shareholders in public corporations have increasingly sought to augment their o...
Jurisdictional competition in corporate law has long been a staple of academic-and sometimes, politi...
Delaware rose to preeminence in the incorporation market after a key point of inflection for corpora...
In the public debate sparked by the corporate scandals of the last years, Delaware has been striking...
Delaware is the state of incorporation for almost two-thirds of the Fortune 500 companies, as well a...
According to the standard account in American corporate law, states compete to supply corporate law ...
Delaware inhabits a competitive landscape that includes, but is not limited to, corporate law. Like ...
Delaware has a population less than one-third of one percent of the nation, but it is the state of i...
As Delaware corporate law confronts the twenty-first-century global economy, the state\u27s legislat...
An enduring inquiry for American corporate law scholars is why the small state of Delaware dominates...
The state competition for corporate law has long been studied as a distinct phenomenon. Under the tr...
Despite its intense focus on inter-jurisdictional competition, corporate law scholarship has thus fa...
A perennial issue in corporate law reform is the desirability of afederal system. For notwithstandin...
This article provides a history of the legal debates over the corporate charters in the American con...
From the classic Cary-Winter debate to current legal scholarship, commentators have struggled to exp...
Over recent decades, shareholders in public corporations have increasingly sought to augment their o...
Jurisdictional competition in corporate law has long been a staple of academic-and sometimes, politi...