This is a review of The Rise of the Uncorporation, by Larry E. Ribstein (Oxford University Press 2010). The Rise of the Uncorporation gives a compelling account of the increasing reliance on business forms other than the corporation. These new organizational forms - such as limited liability companies, limited liability partnerships, partnerships, and the like - give businesses greater freedom to structure themselves in ways that best facilitate their particular needs. And this, according to Ribstein, is an unqualified good, for it allows firms to operate more efficiently than if they were forced to assume an intensely regulated form. Like most stories, though, this one has a heavy, and here it is the corporation. The corporate form, which ...
Agency theory, despite its influential normative prescriptions, has been subject to a long-standing ...
This is an article written in honor of Professor Donald Schwartz, a leading figure in academic corpo...
Publicly traded corporations rarely use the nearly absolute freedom afforded them to draft charters ...
This is a review of The Rise of the Uncorporation, by Larry E. Ribstein (Oxford University Press 201...
This is a review of The Rise of the Uncorporation, by Larry E. Ribstein (Oxford University Press 201...
American corporations are structured in such a way that shareholders, and shareholders alone, have t...
This Article intends to reconcile two competing paradigms within the law and economics model of corp...
Larry Ribstein’s pioneering analysis of alternative business forms during the late twentieth century...
This Article attempts to bridge two discourses—corporate governance and contract governance. Regardi...
Working within the nexus-of-contracts model, scholars have struggled to develop a rhetorical paradig...
It has become standard in the law and economics literature to refer to the corporation as a nexus o...
Corporate law theory in Anglo-American countries has long been dominated by economic analysis. While...
I welcome Avi-Yonah\u27s new deployments of descriptive theories of the corporation. But I traversed...
It has become standard in the law and economics literature to refer to the corporation as a nexus o...
We cannot completely overcome the difficulties caused by the separation of ownership and control. In...
Agency theory, despite its influential normative prescriptions, has been subject to a long-standing ...
This is an article written in honor of Professor Donald Schwartz, a leading figure in academic corpo...
Publicly traded corporations rarely use the nearly absolute freedom afforded them to draft charters ...
This is a review of The Rise of the Uncorporation, by Larry E. Ribstein (Oxford University Press 201...
This is a review of The Rise of the Uncorporation, by Larry E. Ribstein (Oxford University Press 201...
American corporations are structured in such a way that shareholders, and shareholders alone, have t...
This Article intends to reconcile two competing paradigms within the law and economics model of corp...
Larry Ribstein’s pioneering analysis of alternative business forms during the late twentieth century...
This Article attempts to bridge two discourses—corporate governance and contract governance. Regardi...
Working within the nexus-of-contracts model, scholars have struggled to develop a rhetorical paradig...
It has become standard in the law and economics literature to refer to the corporation as a nexus o...
Corporate law theory in Anglo-American countries has long been dominated by economic analysis. While...
I welcome Avi-Yonah\u27s new deployments of descriptive theories of the corporation. But I traversed...
It has become standard in the law and economics literature to refer to the corporation as a nexus o...
We cannot completely overcome the difficulties caused by the separation of ownership and control. In...
Agency theory, despite its influential normative prescriptions, has been subject to a long-standing ...
This is an article written in honor of Professor Donald Schwartz, a leading figure in academic corpo...
Publicly traded corporations rarely use the nearly absolute freedom afforded them to draft charters ...