Kent Greenfield’s Corporations Are People Too (And They Should Act Like It) reclaims the legal theory of corporate personhood from the conservative right and champions it for the progressive left. Greenfield argues that corporate personhood, properly construed, can further progressive goals by limiting certain corporate powers, increasing corporate accountability, and enabling corporate management to govern in the interests of all stakeholders. Greenfield advances a progressive account of corporate personhood and elaborates its implementation in constitutional law and in corporate law. This symposium response extends Greenfield’s conception of corporate person-hood to related questions in securities law and tort law. This is a first step in...
This essay provides a genealogy of corporate personhood as it exists currently in US law and places ...
The community of corporate law scholars in the United States is fragmented. One group, heavily influ...
Over the course of the past few decades, constitutional rights normally given to natural persons hav...
Kent Greenfield’s Corporations Are People Too (And They Should Act Like It) reclaims the legal theor...
The Supreme Court has been wrestling with the doctrinal premises of corporate personhood on several ...
article published in law reviewIn 2010, the U.S. Supreme Court held in Citizens United v. FEC that r...
Corporate legal personhood is a baffling and elusive concept. Are corporations persons and, if so, w...
Why is a corporation a “person” for purposes of the Constitution? This old question has become new a...
The recent controversy over the billions of dollars authorized by Congress to bail out some of the n...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/109353/1/plar12070.pd
Recent court cases such as "Citizens United" have ignited the debate about whether or not corporatio...
This essay is a critique of this attack on corporate personhood. It explains that the corporate sepa...
This paper, part of a larger scholarly project, addresses one of four areas – i.e., the emergence of...
One of the most intriguing debates in corporate law is over the personhood of corporations. For year...
One of the most controversial aspect of the Supreme Court\u27s decisions in Citizens United and Hobb...
This essay provides a genealogy of corporate personhood as it exists currently in US law and places ...
The community of corporate law scholars in the United States is fragmented. One group, heavily influ...
Over the course of the past few decades, constitutional rights normally given to natural persons hav...
Kent Greenfield’s Corporations Are People Too (And They Should Act Like It) reclaims the legal theor...
The Supreme Court has been wrestling with the doctrinal premises of corporate personhood on several ...
article published in law reviewIn 2010, the U.S. Supreme Court held in Citizens United v. FEC that r...
Corporate legal personhood is a baffling and elusive concept. Are corporations persons and, if so, w...
Why is a corporation a “person” for purposes of the Constitution? This old question has become new a...
The recent controversy over the billions of dollars authorized by Congress to bail out some of the n...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/109353/1/plar12070.pd
Recent court cases such as "Citizens United" have ignited the debate about whether or not corporatio...
This essay is a critique of this attack on corporate personhood. It explains that the corporate sepa...
This paper, part of a larger scholarly project, addresses one of four areas – i.e., the emergence of...
One of the most intriguing debates in corporate law is over the personhood of corporations. For year...
One of the most controversial aspect of the Supreme Court\u27s decisions in Citizens United and Hobb...
This essay provides a genealogy of corporate personhood as it exists currently in US law and places ...
The community of corporate law scholars in the United States is fragmented. One group, heavily influ...
Over the course of the past few decades, constitutional rights normally given to natural persons hav...