The two authors of this article have been on opposite sides of this debate, but both recognize that no single explanation is complete and that other factors, such as the self-interest of fund managers, the conflicts of interest faced by institutions who want to retain corporate business, cultural forces, collective action problems, and what we can call path dependence- the difficulty of changing the structure and behavior of highly evolved and specialized institutions - have causal roles in explaining shareholder passivity. The central question in research on American corporate governance is how these forces interact to produce the characteristic passivity of most American institutions
Hedge funds and other private equity funds are aggressive monitors of corporate America. Their inves...
Pichhadze (2010) introduced the Market Oriented Blockholder Model (MOBM) as properly describing the ...
It has been advocated within corporate governance that institutional investors may discipline manage...
A central puzzle in understanding the governance of large American public firms is why most institut...
The two authors of this article have been on opposite sides of this debate, but both recognize that ...
This chapter of the Oxford Handbook on Corporate Law and Governance examines the role of institution...
During the last decade, American capital markets have experienced a marked shift from a constituency...
This article argues that shareholder monitoring is possible: It\u27s an idea that hasn\u27t been tri...
The study explores the challenges UK-based institutional investors face when trying to monitor inves...
Assesses whether the corporate governance norms applicable to financial institutions in the UK are s...
This Symposium volume of the Vanderbilt Law Review, sponsored by the Institute for Law and Economic ...
The growing dominance of equity holdings by institutional investors, both domestic and internationa...
In the corporate governance debate, the short-term versus longterm contention has grown into perhaps...
Institutional investors have increasingly engaged in corporate governance activities, introducing pr...
This Article offers evidence that higher quality internal corporate governance is associated with hi...
Hedge funds and other private equity funds are aggressive monitors of corporate America. Their inves...
Pichhadze (2010) introduced the Market Oriented Blockholder Model (MOBM) as properly describing the ...
It has been advocated within corporate governance that institutional investors may discipline manage...
A central puzzle in understanding the governance of large American public firms is why most institut...
The two authors of this article have been on opposite sides of this debate, but both recognize that ...
This chapter of the Oxford Handbook on Corporate Law and Governance examines the role of institution...
During the last decade, American capital markets have experienced a marked shift from a constituency...
This article argues that shareholder monitoring is possible: It\u27s an idea that hasn\u27t been tri...
The study explores the challenges UK-based institutional investors face when trying to monitor inves...
Assesses whether the corporate governance norms applicable to financial institutions in the UK are s...
This Symposium volume of the Vanderbilt Law Review, sponsored by the Institute for Law and Economic ...
The growing dominance of equity holdings by institutional investors, both domestic and internationa...
In the corporate governance debate, the short-term versus longterm contention has grown into perhaps...
Institutional investors have increasingly engaged in corporate governance activities, introducing pr...
This Article offers evidence that higher quality internal corporate governance is associated with hi...
Hedge funds and other private equity funds are aggressive monitors of corporate America. Their inves...
Pichhadze (2010) introduced the Market Oriented Blockholder Model (MOBM) as properly describing the ...
It has been advocated within corporate governance that institutional investors may discipline manage...