A perennial issue in corporate law reform is the desirability of a federal system. For notwithstanding the invasive growth of regulation by the national government, principally through the federal securities laws, corporate law is still the domain of the states. While no two corporation codes are identical, there is substantial uniformity across the states. Provisions typically spread in a discernible S-shaped pattern, as one state amends its code in response to another state\u27s innovation. The revision process is often analogized in the academic literature to market competition, in which states compete to provide firms with a product, corporate charters, in order to obtain franchise tax revenues. This characterization is the centerpiece ...
Corporate law is an arena in which the metaphor of the states as a laboratory describes actual pra...
For decades, American legal scholars have debated over the implications of allowing corporations to ...
For decades, American legal scholars have debated over the implications of allowing corporations to ...
A perennial issue in corporate law reform is the desirability of afederal system. For notwithstandin...
Jurisdictional competition in corporate law has long been a staple of academic-and sometimes, politi...
In this Essay, Professor Romano considers the efficacy of competition among states for tax revenues ...
The state competition for corporate law has long been studied as a distinct phenomenon. Under the tr...
This paper develops a model of the competition among states in providing corporate law rules. The an...
From the classic Cary-Winter debate to current legal scholarship, commentators have struggled to exp...
This article provides an analysis of why regulatory competition in corporate law has operated, for t...
This paper analyzes certain important shortcomings of state competition in corporate law. In particu...
Delaware rose to preeminence in the incorporation market after a key point of inflection for corpora...
The corporate charter competition has dominated the corporate law literature for four decades. This ...
What sensible compromise can be struck between Bill Cary\u27s and Ralph Winter\u27s views of the com...
Delaware inhabits a competitive landscape that includes, but is not limited to, corporate law. Like ...
Corporate law is an arena in which the metaphor of the states as a laboratory describes actual pra...
For decades, American legal scholars have debated over the implications of allowing corporations to ...
For decades, American legal scholars have debated over the implications of allowing corporations to ...
A perennial issue in corporate law reform is the desirability of afederal system. For notwithstandin...
Jurisdictional competition in corporate law has long been a staple of academic-and sometimes, politi...
In this Essay, Professor Romano considers the efficacy of competition among states for tax revenues ...
The state competition for corporate law has long been studied as a distinct phenomenon. Under the tr...
This paper develops a model of the competition among states in providing corporate law rules. The an...
From the classic Cary-Winter debate to current legal scholarship, commentators have struggled to exp...
This article provides an analysis of why regulatory competition in corporate law has operated, for t...
This paper analyzes certain important shortcomings of state competition in corporate law. In particu...
Delaware rose to preeminence in the incorporation market after a key point of inflection for corpora...
The corporate charter competition has dominated the corporate law literature for four decades. This ...
What sensible compromise can be struck between Bill Cary\u27s and Ralph Winter\u27s views of the com...
Delaware inhabits a competitive landscape that includes, but is not limited to, corporate law. Like ...
Corporate law is an arena in which the metaphor of the states as a laboratory describes actual pra...
For decades, American legal scholars have debated over the implications of allowing corporations to ...
For decades, American legal scholars have debated over the implications of allowing corporations to ...