The European Union recently adopted a Restructuring Directive intended to facilitate the reorganization of insolvent and other financially troubled firms. Although the central goal of the Directive parallels that of chapter 11 of U.S. bankruptcy law—to protect and maximize the value of financially distressed but economically viable enterprises by consensually reorganizing their capital structure—the Directive introduces an innovative but controversial option: that EU Member States can decree that reorganization negotiations should be subject to a relative priority default rule, in contrast to the type of absolute priority default rule used by chapter 11. EU officials argue that relative priority is not only fair but also provides the flexib...
This article engages with a fundamental, but under-theorized, fact: that modern UK and US corporate ...
This Article reports some of the results of an empirical study of the bankruptcy reorganization of l...
This article engages with a fundamental, but under-theorised, fact: that modern UK and US corporate ...
The article delves into the issue of the distribution of the surplus value created through a restruc...
This paper is based on a lecture given on December 6, 1990 ast the Second Annual Robert E. Krinock L...
-A plan for reorganization under section 77B of the Bankruptcy Act involved a debtor holding company...
In a Chapter 11 reorganization, senior creditors can insist on being paid in full before anyone juni...
Corporate reorganization under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code is built on the foundation of the a...
Corporate reorganization under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code is built on the foundation of the a...
In a Chapter 11 reorganization, senior creditors are entitled to insist upon being paid in full befo...
This Article challenges the view that the absolute priority rule applies to a “structured dismissal”...
Corporate reorganization under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code is built on the foundation of the a...
Corporate reorganization under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code is built on the foundation of the a...
In essence, insolvency law is collective debt collection law. By means of a collective procedure, in...
(Excerpt) The culmination of a chapter 11 case is typically a plan that provides for payment to cred...
This article engages with a fundamental, but under-theorized, fact: that modern UK and US corporate ...
This Article reports some of the results of an empirical study of the bankruptcy reorganization of l...
This article engages with a fundamental, but under-theorised, fact: that modern UK and US corporate ...
The article delves into the issue of the distribution of the surplus value created through a restruc...
This paper is based on a lecture given on December 6, 1990 ast the Second Annual Robert E. Krinock L...
-A plan for reorganization under section 77B of the Bankruptcy Act involved a debtor holding company...
In a Chapter 11 reorganization, senior creditors can insist on being paid in full before anyone juni...
Corporate reorganization under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code is built on the foundation of the a...
Corporate reorganization under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code is built on the foundation of the a...
In a Chapter 11 reorganization, senior creditors are entitled to insist upon being paid in full befo...
This Article challenges the view that the absolute priority rule applies to a “structured dismissal”...
Corporate reorganization under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code is built on the foundation of the a...
Corporate reorganization under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code is built on the foundation of the a...
In essence, insolvency law is collective debt collection law. By means of a collective procedure, in...
(Excerpt) The culmination of a chapter 11 case is typically a plan that provides for payment to cred...
This article engages with a fundamental, but under-theorized, fact: that modern UK and US corporate ...
This Article reports some of the results of an empirical study of the bankruptcy reorganization of l...
This article engages with a fundamental, but under-theorised, fact: that modern UK and US corporate ...