The demand for a rapid response to constant business developments turns existing corporate legislations and Directives into an obstacle to innovation and progress. Company law’s need for continuously updated and flexible solutions can be accomplished with a model act. In 1950 the US presented its MBCA and there is currently a European working group involved in a voluntary and private project trying to develop a similar model for the EU. An EMCA should cooperate with the competition between Member States and their corporate legislation to further the practice of converging rules within EU company law. The working group needs to study the structure, comprehension, composition and general process of the MBCA project in detail and let the estab...
The Commission of the European Communities has recently submitted to the Council of Ministers of the...
This paper makes a case for the future development of European corporate law through regulatory comp...
CMU features an extreme heterogeneity of i) market players (issuers, intermediaries, infrastructures...
The demand for a rapid response to constant business developments turns existing corporate legislati...
The EMCA is designed to provide a source of inspiration for company law for European Member States a...
On 27 and 28 September 2007, a commission formed on the initiative of the authors held its first mee...
This paper is a contribution to a symposium on the European Model Company Act (“EMCA”) in which I ar...
Company groups: European Model Company Act (EMCA) and Lithuanian Context In September 2015, after mo...
Dear Colleagues, Dear Participants, Ladies and Gentlemen, good afternoon. As you all know, the Europ...
A toast to the Model Business Corporation Act (MBCA), and especially its forefathers, on its 60th Bi...
Corporate group law has not been comprehensively regulated in EU law, but it is nevertheless the sub...
In this Article, Professor Blackburn examines and evaluates the Commission of the European Community...
Apart from Germany and Austria, corporate participation in the European Eco-Management and Audit Sch...
Apart from in Germany and Austria, corporate participation in the European Eco-Management and Audit ...
Ever since its first version, the EMAS Regulation has represented a point of reference for enterpris...
The Commission of the European Communities has recently submitted to the Council of Ministers of the...
This paper makes a case for the future development of European corporate law through regulatory comp...
CMU features an extreme heterogeneity of i) market players (issuers, intermediaries, infrastructures...
The demand for a rapid response to constant business developments turns existing corporate legislati...
The EMCA is designed to provide a source of inspiration for company law for European Member States a...
On 27 and 28 September 2007, a commission formed on the initiative of the authors held its first mee...
This paper is a contribution to a symposium on the European Model Company Act (“EMCA”) in which I ar...
Company groups: European Model Company Act (EMCA) and Lithuanian Context In September 2015, after mo...
Dear Colleagues, Dear Participants, Ladies and Gentlemen, good afternoon. As you all know, the Europ...
A toast to the Model Business Corporation Act (MBCA), and especially its forefathers, on its 60th Bi...
Corporate group law has not been comprehensively regulated in EU law, but it is nevertheless the sub...
In this Article, Professor Blackburn examines and evaluates the Commission of the European Community...
Apart from Germany and Austria, corporate participation in the European Eco-Management and Audit Sch...
Apart from in Germany and Austria, corporate participation in the European Eco-Management and Audit ...
Ever since its first version, the EMAS Regulation has represented a point of reference for enterpris...
The Commission of the European Communities has recently submitted to the Council of Ministers of the...
This paper makes a case for the future development of European corporate law through regulatory comp...
CMU features an extreme heterogeneity of i) market players (issuers, intermediaries, infrastructures...