Traditional approaches to corporate governance focus exclusively on shareholders and neglect the large and growing role of creditors. Today\u27s creditors craft elaborate covenants that give them a large role in the affairs of the corporation. While they do not exercise their rights in sunny times when things are going well, these are not the times that matter most. When a business stumbles, creditors typically enjoy powers that public shareholders never have, such as the ability to replace the managers and install those more to their liking. Creditors exercise these powers even when the business is far from being insolvent and continues to pay its debts. Bankruptcy provides no sanctuary, as senior lenders ensure that their powers either go...
My dissertation consists of three essays on Corporate Governance. The first essay studies a situatio...
In this Article, I turn to the history of corporate law for insight into the role that the corporate...
In the 1980s and early 1990s, many observers believed that the American corporate bankruptcy laws we...
Traditional approaches to corporate governance focus exclusively on shareholders and neglect the lar...
Part I of this Article describes the context in which the issues of corporate governance typically a...
Corporate law is dominated by an equity-only view of corporate governance that centers on management...
Creditors exercise significant power over financially distressed corporations, thereby pushing corpo...
This chapter from the book Research Handbook on the Economics of Corporate Law (Claire Hill & Brett ...
The influence of banks and other private lenders pervades public companies. From the first day of a ...
Most of the corporate governance literature rests on a premise that the interests of various stakeho...
General corporate law delegates the power to manage a corpora-tion to the board of directors. The bo...
Ordinary corporate law invests enormous authority in corporate leaders, largely without accountabili...
This chapter provides a survey of law, economics, and finance scholarship at the intersection of cor...
Corporations are vulnerable to the greed, self-dealing and conflicts of those in control of the corp...
In the 1980s and early 1990s, many observers believed that the American corporate bankruptcy laws we...
My dissertation consists of three essays on Corporate Governance. The first essay studies a situatio...
In this Article, I turn to the history of corporate law for insight into the role that the corporate...
In the 1980s and early 1990s, many observers believed that the American corporate bankruptcy laws we...
Traditional approaches to corporate governance focus exclusively on shareholders and neglect the lar...
Part I of this Article describes the context in which the issues of corporate governance typically a...
Corporate law is dominated by an equity-only view of corporate governance that centers on management...
Creditors exercise significant power over financially distressed corporations, thereby pushing corpo...
This chapter from the book Research Handbook on the Economics of Corporate Law (Claire Hill & Brett ...
The influence of banks and other private lenders pervades public companies. From the first day of a ...
Most of the corporate governance literature rests on a premise that the interests of various stakeho...
General corporate law delegates the power to manage a corpora-tion to the board of directors. The bo...
Ordinary corporate law invests enormous authority in corporate leaders, largely without accountabili...
This chapter provides a survey of law, economics, and finance scholarship at the intersection of cor...
Corporations are vulnerable to the greed, self-dealing and conflicts of those in control of the corp...
In the 1980s and early 1990s, many observers believed that the American corporate bankruptcy laws we...
My dissertation consists of three essays on Corporate Governance. The first essay studies a situatio...
In this Article, I turn to the history of corporate law for insight into the role that the corporate...
In the 1980s and early 1990s, many observers believed that the American corporate bankruptcy laws we...