This article uses the case of the financialization of large law firms to develop debates about the process of the ‘capitalisation of everything’ whereby financial logics spread both geographically between countries and sectorally from one industry to another. Drawing on work that analyses how discourses of shareholder value have led to the re-organization of firms, the article argues that large law firms have undergone ‘surgery’ as part of attempts to make them appear more and more profitable when assessed using the metric profits per equity partner. The influence of geographical context—English regulation and institutions relating to the legal profession—on ‘surgery’ in the period 1993–2008 are also outlined as part of a situated analysis ...
This Article introduces the “Born Global” concept into the discussion of law firms and lawyers. Born...
Large corporate law firms seem to be in a state of extraordinary flux. Success and failure are both ...
In this Article, Professor Skeel argues that the important recent literature exploring historical an...
This article uses the case of the financialization of large law firms to develop debates about the p...
The goal of this Article is to examine the partnership model and advocate for a change in the Model ...
The Article debunks the highly publicized claim, within the academy and the legal profession, that t...
This article re-examines the shareholder value revolution of the 1980s to challenge the dominant con...
The past four decades have seen a significant re-organization in the underlying structure of capital...
Adopting a comparative UK/US approach, this article argues for the need to rethink corporate bankrup...
This paper argues that, as far as the investment behavior of non-financial corporations is concerned...
Larry Mitchell\u27s book describes the movement toward share price maximization by corporate manager...
Globalization has fundamentally accelerated and altered business transactions. The search for low la...
This essay is a contribution to the forthcoming Oxford University Press Handbook of Corporate Law an...
It used to be thought that what we now call ‘corporate governance’ was a rather complex affair. Whic...
This article challenges the idea that the corporation is a globally superior form of business organi...
This Article introduces the “Born Global” concept into the discussion of law firms and lawyers. Born...
Large corporate law firms seem to be in a state of extraordinary flux. Success and failure are both ...
In this Article, Professor Skeel argues that the important recent literature exploring historical an...
This article uses the case of the financialization of large law firms to develop debates about the p...
The goal of this Article is to examine the partnership model and advocate for a change in the Model ...
The Article debunks the highly publicized claim, within the academy and the legal profession, that t...
This article re-examines the shareholder value revolution of the 1980s to challenge the dominant con...
The past four decades have seen a significant re-organization in the underlying structure of capital...
Adopting a comparative UK/US approach, this article argues for the need to rethink corporate bankrup...
This paper argues that, as far as the investment behavior of non-financial corporations is concerned...
Larry Mitchell\u27s book describes the movement toward share price maximization by corporate manager...
Globalization has fundamentally accelerated and altered business transactions. The search for low la...
This essay is a contribution to the forthcoming Oxford University Press Handbook of Corporate Law an...
It used to be thought that what we now call ‘corporate governance’ was a rather complex affair. Whic...
This article challenges the idea that the corporation is a globally superior form of business organi...
This Article introduces the “Born Global” concept into the discussion of law firms and lawyers. Born...
Large corporate law firms seem to be in a state of extraordinary flux. Success and failure are both ...
In this Article, Professor Skeel argues that the important recent literature exploring historical an...