Who holds power in corporate America? Scholars have invariably answered this question in the language of ownership and control. This paper argues that tackling this question today requires a new language. Whereas the comparative political economy literature has long treated dispersed ownership and weak shareholders as core features of the U.S. political economy, a century-long process of re-concentration has consolidated shareholdings in the hands of a few very large asset management companies. In an historically unprecedented configuration, this emerging asset manager capitalism is dominated by fully diversified shareholders that lack direct economic interest in the performance of individual portfolio companies. The paper compares this new...
The conventional view of corporate governance is that it is a neutral set of processes and practices...
The modern corporation did not reach its present position of importance in economic and social fact ...
Since 1990, both the U.S. and Germany have substantially reformed their corporate governance regimes...
The rise of asset managers as key nodes of financial intermediation has been one of the most fundame...
This thesis considers the link between changes in the shareholder ownership structure and the gove...
The power of finance vis-à-vis the nonfinancial sector is changing. Macroeconomic developments and f...
Corporate governance denotes different practices and procedures in economic sociology and in the eco...
This article identifies two, nation-wide, forms of governance or organizing capital,`shareholder' ca...
To fully understand governance and authority in the large corporation, one must attend to politics. ...
This paper constitutes the introduction to an edited collection, THE EMBEDDED FIRM: LABOR, CORPORATE...
Recent scholarship on comparative corporate governance has produced a puzzle. While Berle and Means ...
After the Second World War, in USA and in the capitalist Europe, a new economic growth regime emerge...
Corporate governance is on the reform agenda all over the world. How will global economic integratio...
Vigilant boards and attentive stockholders are relatively new developments, argues Brian R. Cheffin
The hostile takeover may have become a receding memory, but the problem that the market in corporate...
The conventional view of corporate governance is that it is a neutral set of processes and practices...
The modern corporation did not reach its present position of importance in economic and social fact ...
Since 1990, both the U.S. and Germany have substantially reformed their corporate governance regimes...
The rise of asset managers as key nodes of financial intermediation has been one of the most fundame...
This thesis considers the link between changes in the shareholder ownership structure and the gove...
The power of finance vis-à-vis the nonfinancial sector is changing. Macroeconomic developments and f...
Corporate governance denotes different practices and procedures in economic sociology and in the eco...
This article identifies two, nation-wide, forms of governance or organizing capital,`shareholder' ca...
To fully understand governance and authority in the large corporation, one must attend to politics. ...
This paper constitutes the introduction to an edited collection, THE EMBEDDED FIRM: LABOR, CORPORATE...
Recent scholarship on comparative corporate governance has produced a puzzle. While Berle and Means ...
After the Second World War, in USA and in the capitalist Europe, a new economic growth regime emerge...
Corporate governance is on the reform agenda all over the world. How will global economic integratio...
Vigilant boards and attentive stockholders are relatively new developments, argues Brian R. Cheffin
The hostile takeover may have become a receding memory, but the problem that the market in corporate...
The conventional view of corporate governance is that it is a neutral set of processes and practices...
The modern corporation did not reach its present position of importance in economic and social fact ...
Since 1990, both the U.S. and Germany have substantially reformed their corporate governance regimes...