Considerable scholarship during the last few decades addresses the question of whether corporate laws are becoming global by converging on commonly accepted approaches. Some scholars have asserted that such convergence is occurring around the most efficient laws and institutions, thereby marking the “End of History” for corporate law. This Article responds to such assertions by developing three claims not previously given due attention in the convergence literature. First, it demonstrates that the history of corporations and corporate law has been one of seemingly constant movement toward global convergence, yet the resulting convergence is always incomplete or transitory. Next, it points out that because forces besides efficiency also prod...
Professors Bratton and McCahery take up the main questions addressed by the literature on comparativ...
In this Article, the authors intend to fill a gap in the comparative law literature by adopting a ca...
There is widespread agreement that law firms have embraced globalization, but what this means and ...
Considerable scholarship during the last few decades addresses the question of whether corporate law...
Considerable scholarship during the last few decades addresses the question of whether corporate law...
This chapter discusses the question of “convergence or persistence” in corporate law and governance....
THE prospects for international convergence in corporate governance systems have become a hot topic ...
Comparative corporate governance has focused either on prevailing differences across legal systems o...
Globalization has led to a remarkable resurgence in the study of comparative corporate governance. T...
This article will introduce both the dominant corporate model and corporate ownership structure as w...
Much recent scholarship has emphasized institutional differences in corporate governance, capital ma...
Over the past two decades, corporate governance reforms have emerged as a central focus of corporate...
Comparative research has shown that, even at the level of the largest firms, corporate ownership str...
The Sarbanes-Oxley Act shook the corporate world beyond US borders more than Enron shook the corpora...
This Article examines the recent phenomenon of the convergence of competition law regimes across the...
Professors Bratton and McCahery take up the main questions addressed by the literature on comparativ...
In this Article, the authors intend to fill a gap in the comparative law literature by adopting a ca...
There is widespread agreement that law firms have embraced globalization, but what this means and ...
Considerable scholarship during the last few decades addresses the question of whether corporate law...
Considerable scholarship during the last few decades addresses the question of whether corporate law...
This chapter discusses the question of “convergence or persistence” in corporate law and governance....
THE prospects for international convergence in corporate governance systems have become a hot topic ...
Comparative corporate governance has focused either on prevailing differences across legal systems o...
Globalization has led to a remarkable resurgence in the study of comparative corporate governance. T...
This article will introduce both the dominant corporate model and corporate ownership structure as w...
Much recent scholarship has emphasized institutional differences in corporate governance, capital ma...
Over the past two decades, corporate governance reforms have emerged as a central focus of corporate...
Comparative research has shown that, even at the level of the largest firms, corporate ownership str...
The Sarbanes-Oxley Act shook the corporate world beyond US borders more than Enron shook the corpora...
This Article examines the recent phenomenon of the convergence of competition law regimes across the...
Professors Bratton and McCahery take up the main questions addressed by the literature on comparativ...
In this Article, the authors intend to fill a gap in the comparative law literature by adopting a ca...
There is widespread agreement that law firms have embraced globalization, but what this means and ...