This article seeks to address the manner in which we should conceptualise the duties of directors in making decisions where fundamental rights are at stake. We first attempt to show that, in making decisions that implicate fundamental rights, directors are required to consider all individuals affected as having an intrinsic dignity. The interests of non-shareholders must thus be addressed in a non-instrumental manner which, we argue, is only compatible with the adoption of a ‘stakeholder’ conception of directors’ duties. Adopting such an approach, however, raises the difficulty of how directors are to balance multiple intrinsically valuable interests. We argue that the doctrine of proportionality—which has been developed in fundamental righ...
If profit-maximizing is not enforced by corporate law, why does it nonetheless happen as a matter of...
This article provides a comparative perspective on the issue of directors’ liability for actions by ...
Directors are trustees of their companies, with the effect that they stand in a fiduciary relationsh...
Shareholders have many legal rights, but they are not all of equal significance. This article will a...
The time is ripe for a critical analysis of the scope of directors' duties, the role of shareholder ...
Traditionally, the purpose of directors’ duties within company law is to ensure that the powers of ...
One of the most written-about and important topics in corporate law is the fiduciary obligations of ...
Corporations can significantly affect the fundamental rights of individuals. This book investigates ...
The question underpinning whether directors can legitimately consider and balance other constituents...
In this article, we identify a fundamental contradiction in the law of fiduciary duty of corporate d...
A company is a legal construct with certain identifiable characteristics such as separate legal pers...
A company is an organization that is set to maximize profit with the smallest expenses, this purpose...
As shareholders representatives, board of directors need to act in the best interest of the company....
This article examines scholarly debates and judicial decisions, ranging from the turn of the twentie...
In the past decades, shareholder democracy has been the center of attention in corporate governance ...
If profit-maximizing is not enforced by corporate law, why does it nonetheless happen as a matter of...
This article provides a comparative perspective on the issue of directors’ liability for actions by ...
Directors are trustees of their companies, with the effect that they stand in a fiduciary relationsh...
Shareholders have many legal rights, but they are not all of equal significance. This article will a...
The time is ripe for a critical analysis of the scope of directors' duties, the role of shareholder ...
Traditionally, the purpose of directors’ duties within company law is to ensure that the powers of ...
One of the most written-about and important topics in corporate law is the fiduciary obligations of ...
Corporations can significantly affect the fundamental rights of individuals. This book investigates ...
The question underpinning whether directors can legitimately consider and balance other constituents...
In this article, we identify a fundamental contradiction in the law of fiduciary duty of corporate d...
A company is a legal construct with certain identifiable characteristics such as separate legal pers...
A company is an organization that is set to maximize profit with the smallest expenses, this purpose...
As shareholders representatives, board of directors need to act in the best interest of the company....
This article examines scholarly debates and judicial decisions, ranging from the turn of the twentie...
In the past decades, shareholder democracy has been the center of attention in corporate governance ...
If profit-maximizing is not enforced by corporate law, why does it nonetheless happen as a matter of...
This article provides a comparative perspective on the issue of directors’ liability for actions by ...
Directors are trustees of their companies, with the effect that they stand in a fiduciary relationsh...