A corporation is not a contract. It is a state-created entity. It has legal personhood with the right to form contracts, suffer liability for torts, and (as the Supreme Court recently decided) make campaign contributions. However, many corporate law scholars have remained wedded to the conception-metaphor, model, paradigm, what have you-of the corporation as a contract or nexus of contracts. The nexus of contracts theory is meant to point up the voluntary, market-oriented nature of the firm and to dismiss the notion that the corporation owes anything to the state. It is also used as a justification for preserving the corporate law status quo. Since the corporation is contractual in nature, the argument goes, corporate structure reflects w...
Lawrence Cunningham has written an insightful and persuasive article calling on courts to apply the ...
A half-filled glass of water can be described as either half full or half empty. The structure of Am...
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...
It has become standard in the law and economics literature to refer to the corporation as a nexus o...
It has become standard in the law and economics literature to refer to the corporation as a nexus o...
Working within the nexus-of-contracts model, scholars have struggled to develop a rhetorical paradig...
This article attempts to bridge two discourses — corporate governance and contract governance. Regar...
The dominant view of the corporation in legal scholarship is contractarian, one that sees the corpor...
© 2022, The Author(s). This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 Internation...
Contractarians view the corporation as a nexus of contracts, constituted by the express or implied c...
Corporate law theory in Anglo-American countries has long been dominated by economic analysis. While...
Lawrence Cunningham has written an insightful and persuasive article calling on courts to apply the ...
A half-filled glass of water can be described as either half full or half empty. The structure of Am...
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...
It has become standard in the law and economics literature to refer to the corporation as a nexus o...
It has become standard in the law and economics literature to refer to the corporation as a nexus o...
Working within the nexus-of-contracts model, scholars have struggled to develop a rhetorical paradig...
This article attempts to bridge two discourses — corporate governance and contract governance. Regar...
The dominant view of the corporation in legal scholarship is contractarian, one that sees the corpor...
© 2022, The Author(s). This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 Internation...
Contractarians view the corporation as a nexus of contracts, constituted by the express or implied c...
Corporate law theory in Anglo-American countries has long been dominated by economic analysis. While...
Lawrence Cunningham has written an insightful and persuasive article calling on courts to apply the ...
A half-filled glass of water can be described as either half full or half empty. The structure of Am...
Publicly traded corporations rarely use the nearly absolute freedom afforded them to draft charters ...