On the occasion of the increase in corporate wars and takeover battles, the author examines the constitutional and conflict of laws issues involved in choosing the law to govern the internal affairs aspects of the defensive and offensive strategies and tactics used in the various confrontations. This leads to a review of recent judicial and legislative developments, including the antitakeover statutes, to an examination of the traditional and the new conflict-of-laws methodologies as they affect internal corporate affairs, and to an analysis of the implications of the due process, full faith and credit, and, especially, the commerce clauses of the United States Constitution. Finally, the extraterritoriality of the internal affairs dimension...
This is the long-awaited second edition of this highly regarded comparative overview of corporate l...
The application of American law to litigation with international elementshas provoked a storm of con...
This Article views the modern federal presumption against the extraterritoriality of U.S. law throug...
This article examines the constitutional validity of business combination antitakeover statutes. Del...
The state competition for corporate law has long been studied as a distinct phenomenon. Under the tr...
In a federal system in which each state may enact laws providing for the chartering and governance o...
This article examines how the globalization of economic markets, and attendant changes in internatio...
The last twenty years have witnessed an explosion of corporate takeovers, mergers and acquisitions. ...
The Internal Affairs Doctrine ( IAD ) has traditionally been a categorical rule mandating that in co...
The most lively debate in corporate law today concerns takeovers.There are two important questions. ...
This book is designed primarily to serve as a supplement allowing professors teaching corporate law ...
Developed common-law jurisdictions have had better economic performance in comparison to continental...
When a corporate creditor seeks to pierce the corporate veil to hold an individual shareholder per...
How far may one state go in regulating another state\u27s corporations? Traditionally, the answer to...
In recent years, there has been a significant increase in the number of hostile share acquisitions o...
This is the long-awaited second edition of this highly regarded comparative overview of corporate l...
The application of American law to litigation with international elementshas provoked a storm of con...
This Article views the modern federal presumption against the extraterritoriality of U.S. law throug...
This article examines the constitutional validity of business combination antitakeover statutes. Del...
The state competition for corporate law has long been studied as a distinct phenomenon. Under the tr...
In a federal system in which each state may enact laws providing for the chartering and governance o...
This article examines how the globalization of economic markets, and attendant changes in internatio...
The last twenty years have witnessed an explosion of corporate takeovers, mergers and acquisitions. ...
The Internal Affairs Doctrine ( IAD ) has traditionally been a categorical rule mandating that in co...
The most lively debate in corporate law today concerns takeovers.There are two important questions. ...
This book is designed primarily to serve as a supplement allowing professors teaching corporate law ...
Developed common-law jurisdictions have had better economic performance in comparison to continental...
When a corporate creditor seeks to pierce the corporate veil to hold an individual shareholder per...
How far may one state go in regulating another state\u27s corporations? Traditionally, the answer to...
In recent years, there has been a significant increase in the number of hostile share acquisitions o...
This is the long-awaited second edition of this highly regarded comparative overview of corporate l...
The application of American law to litigation with international elementshas provoked a storm of con...
This Article views the modern federal presumption against the extraterritoriality of U.S. law throug...