This Article corrects widespread misconception about whether complex regulatory systems can be fairly described as either rules-based or principles-based (also called standards-based ). Promiscuous use of these labels has proliferated in the years since the implosion of Enron Corp. While the concepts of rules and principles (or standards) are useful to classify individual provisions, they are not scalable to the level of complex regulatory systems. The Article uses examples from corporate law, securities regulation and accounting to illustrate this problematic phenomenon before turning to a series of possible explanations for the widespread use of these misleading labels. The piece contributes to the substantive fields it uses to anima...
Antitrust law is moving away from rules (ex ante, limited factor liability determinants) and toward ...
Should the securities regulation of Ontario venture issuers be based primarily on rules or principle...
This Article provides a democratic assessment of the corporate lawmaking structure in the United Sta...
This Article corrects widespread misconception about whether complex regulatory systems can be descr...
This Article corrects widespread misconception about whether complex regulatory systems can be fairl...
Although the securities industry is primarily regulated by specific rules, it is also governed by ge...
The Sarbanes-Oxley Act and the Securities Exchange Commission move too quickly ·when they prod the F...
Financial regulation poses special challenges because markets a constructed in the sense that they r...
This paper analyses how regulatory competition affects principles‐based and rules‐based systems of r...
In the last two decades, massive financial scandals have impaired the integrity of the financial mar...
Objectives: This paper examines the implications of principles-based versus rules-based accounting s...
Securities markets have long employed gatekeepers – independent professions who pledge their reput...
This paper analyses how regulatory competition affects principles based and rules based systems of r...
The time is long past when either economist or lawyers, on the basis of their own singular disciplin...
Securities regulation wears two hats. Its “upstream” side governs firms in connection with their obt...
Antitrust law is moving away from rules (ex ante, limited factor liability determinants) and toward ...
Should the securities regulation of Ontario venture issuers be based primarily on rules or principle...
This Article provides a democratic assessment of the corporate lawmaking structure in the United Sta...
This Article corrects widespread misconception about whether complex regulatory systems can be descr...
This Article corrects widespread misconception about whether complex regulatory systems can be fairl...
Although the securities industry is primarily regulated by specific rules, it is also governed by ge...
The Sarbanes-Oxley Act and the Securities Exchange Commission move too quickly ·when they prod the F...
Financial regulation poses special challenges because markets a constructed in the sense that they r...
This paper analyses how regulatory competition affects principles‐based and rules‐based systems of r...
In the last two decades, massive financial scandals have impaired the integrity of the financial mar...
Objectives: This paper examines the implications of principles-based versus rules-based accounting s...
Securities markets have long employed gatekeepers – independent professions who pledge their reput...
This paper analyses how regulatory competition affects principles based and rules based systems of r...
The time is long past when either economist or lawyers, on the basis of their own singular disciplin...
Securities regulation wears two hats. Its “upstream” side governs firms in connection with their obt...
Antitrust law is moving away from rules (ex ante, limited factor liability determinants) and toward ...
Should the securities regulation of Ontario venture issuers be based primarily on rules or principle...
This Article provides a democratic assessment of the corporate lawmaking structure in the United Sta...