Rather than evolving as a platform for renegotiation and debt discharge, as in France, English bankruptcy law emerged as a liquidation-only institution after majority arrangements among creditors were prohibited, in 1621. However, after 1705, good faith debtors could be offered a discharge, i.e. a form of limited liability. Later, private practices also developed into a little-known body of consistent, court-enforced, “quasi-bankruptcy rules” based however on voluntary adhesion. A key element was the convergence between the old, Law Merchant “composition agreement” and the English trust, to which creditors could jointly convey assets. By the 1780s, therefore, merchants were offered rigidity under the statutes or large, though voluntary nego...
In this paper, we try to measure the impact of the changes in French bankruptcy law in the 19th cent...
This thesis is a history of the reform of English bankruptcy law 1831-1914 and a stat...
Since the early 1997 paper by La Porta et al., a growing body of research has argued that 'legal ori...
Rather than evolving as a platform for renegotiation and debt discharge, as in France, English bankr...
Rather than evolving as a platform for renegotiation and debt discharge, as on the Continent, Englis...
This contribution first presents a brief outline of the economic logic of bankruptcy laws as of thei...
This paper is the first result of a project aiming at understanding the history of bankruptcy law fr...
This paper aims at giving an explanation of the changes in the number of bankruptcies during the sec...
Since the early 1997 paper by La Porta et al., a growing body of research has argued that ‘legal ori...
Economic literature studies bankruptcy as a homogenous phenomenon. Insolvency concerns all kind of f...
The evolutions of the bankruptcy law seek to reach many aims: economic safety, firms' creation and e...
Since LLSV early 1998 paper, a growing body of research has argued that “legal origins ” have a coun...
A growing body of research in economics and in business and economic history has shown the key role ...
Despite the relevance of bankruptcy law for a number of key issues regarding business functioning an...
In this paper, we try to measure the impact of the changes in French bankruptcy law in the 19th cent...
This thesis is a history of the reform of English bankruptcy law 1831-1914 and a stat...
Since the early 1997 paper by La Porta et al., a growing body of research has argued that 'legal ori...
Rather than evolving as a platform for renegotiation and debt discharge, as in France, English bankr...
Rather than evolving as a platform for renegotiation and debt discharge, as on the Continent, Englis...
This contribution first presents a brief outline of the economic logic of bankruptcy laws as of thei...
This paper is the first result of a project aiming at understanding the history of bankruptcy law fr...
This paper aims at giving an explanation of the changes in the number of bankruptcies during the sec...
Since the early 1997 paper by La Porta et al., a growing body of research has argued that ‘legal ori...
Economic literature studies bankruptcy as a homogenous phenomenon. Insolvency concerns all kind of f...
The evolutions of the bankruptcy law seek to reach many aims: economic safety, firms' creation and e...
Since LLSV early 1998 paper, a growing body of research has argued that “legal origins ” have a coun...
A growing body of research in economics and in business and economic history has shown the key role ...
Despite the relevance of bankruptcy law for a number of key issues regarding business functioning an...
In this paper, we try to measure the impact of the changes in French bankruptcy law in the 19th cent...
This thesis is a history of the reform of English bankruptcy law 1831-1914 and a stat...
Since the early 1997 paper by La Porta et al., a growing body of research has argued that 'legal ori...