This paper was presented in the framework of the workshop Companies and Company Law in Late Medieval and Early Modern Europe, held at the Catholic University of Leuven (Belgium) in February 2012. In this occasion my expertise in commercial law history was recognized and the publication of the papers of the workshop gave me the opportunity to develop a topic which I had already touched in my PhD thesis, i.e., the very close link between the medieval merchant guilds and the chartered companies of the modern period. With reference to the juridical organization of the EIC, I underline the connection with the past during the first century after its foundation (e.g. voting system) rather than stressing the connections with the present structure o...
This article analyses the public debates about the two corporate forms used in the seventeenth centu...
With their legal personhood, permanent capital with transferable shares, separation of ownership and...
Modern advocates of corporate self-regulation have drawn unlikely inspiration from the Middle Ages. ...
This paper was presented in the framework of the workshop Companies and Company Law in Late Medieval...
This book collects the proceedings of a workshop on the late medieval and early modern history of co...
The present article investigates how the custom of limiting the responsibility of the partners arose...
This thesis is concerned with jurisdictionally evasive European corporations in the Atlantic region....
We describe how, during the 17th century, the business corporation gradually emerged in response to ...
The notion that business corporations should be managed for the exclusive benefit of shareholders ha...
Prompted by the litany of complaints about corporate boards - as once again highlighted by recent co...
The notion that business corporations should be managed for the exclusive benefit of shareholders h...
The Portuguese East India Company, incorporated in 1628, is one the historical predecessors of the m...
Modern advocates of corporate self-regulation have drawn unlikely inspiration from the Middle Ages. ...
The company is considered a separate legal entity in both legislation and jurisprudence. The “veil” ...
This article presents the origins of corporate creditor protection mechanisms in the Western legal t...
This article analyses the public debates about the two corporate forms used in the seventeenth centu...
With their legal personhood, permanent capital with transferable shares, separation of ownership and...
Modern advocates of corporate self-regulation have drawn unlikely inspiration from the Middle Ages. ...
This paper was presented in the framework of the workshop Companies and Company Law in Late Medieval...
This book collects the proceedings of a workshop on the late medieval and early modern history of co...
The present article investigates how the custom of limiting the responsibility of the partners arose...
This thesis is concerned with jurisdictionally evasive European corporations in the Atlantic region....
We describe how, during the 17th century, the business corporation gradually emerged in response to ...
The notion that business corporations should be managed for the exclusive benefit of shareholders ha...
Prompted by the litany of complaints about corporate boards - as once again highlighted by recent co...
The notion that business corporations should be managed for the exclusive benefit of shareholders h...
The Portuguese East India Company, incorporated in 1628, is one the historical predecessors of the m...
Modern advocates of corporate self-regulation have drawn unlikely inspiration from the Middle Ages. ...
The company is considered a separate legal entity in both legislation and jurisprudence. The “veil” ...
This article presents the origins of corporate creditor protection mechanisms in the Western legal t...
This article analyses the public debates about the two corporate forms used in the seventeenth centu...
With their legal personhood, permanent capital with transferable shares, separation of ownership and...
Modern advocates of corporate self-regulation have drawn unlikely inspiration from the Middle Ages. ...