Doing Well While Doing Good: Reassessing the Scope of Directors\u27 Fiduciary Obligations in For-Profit Corporations with Non-Shareholder Beneficiaries, 59 Wash. & Lee L. Rev. 414 (2002), explores corporate fiduciary duties in the context of for-profit companies that operate in traditionally non-profit spheres. The rise in privatization - a conversion from certain businesses being operated by nonprofit and government entities to operation by for-profit companies - has sparked considerable opposition, particularly when it occurs within industries that deliver some societal good such as health care or education. Opponents claim that for-profit companies cannot pay heed to their social or charitable commitments because they must focus on gen...
The question underpinning whether directors can legitimately consider and balance other constituents...
The question of how fiduciary duties should be allocated within the public corporation has been the ...
This study sets out to answer the question whether compliance with the directors’ fiduciary duty to ...
Doing Well While Doing Good: Reassessing the Scope of Directors\u27 Fiduciary Obligations in For-Pro...
Traditionally, organizations are divided into three sectors: for-profit, non-profit, and the governm...
Can someone running a business do good while doing well? Can they benefit society and the environmen...
One of the most written-about and important topics in corporate law is the fiduciary obligations of ...
The non-profit sector is ripe for abuse due to non-profit organizations\u27 unique regulatory positi...
This Article provides a crucial corrective to the “corporate social responsibility” debate, which co...
Directors are trustees of their companies, with the effect that they stand in a fiduciary relationsh...
Can someone running a business do good while doing well? Can they benefit society and the environmen...
Corporate law and scholarship generally assume that professional managers control public corporation...
Recent business scandals have focused attention on failures of corporate governance involving serio...
To economically oriented corporate law professors, distinguishing between directors\u27 fiduciary du...
Book Chapter Julian Velasco, Shareholder Primacy in Benefit Corporations, in Fiduciary Obligations i...
The question underpinning whether directors can legitimately consider and balance other constituents...
The question of how fiduciary duties should be allocated within the public corporation has been the ...
This study sets out to answer the question whether compliance with the directors’ fiduciary duty to ...
Doing Well While Doing Good: Reassessing the Scope of Directors\u27 Fiduciary Obligations in For-Pro...
Traditionally, organizations are divided into three sectors: for-profit, non-profit, and the governm...
Can someone running a business do good while doing well? Can they benefit society and the environmen...
One of the most written-about and important topics in corporate law is the fiduciary obligations of ...
The non-profit sector is ripe for abuse due to non-profit organizations\u27 unique regulatory positi...
This Article provides a crucial corrective to the “corporate social responsibility” debate, which co...
Directors are trustees of their companies, with the effect that they stand in a fiduciary relationsh...
Can someone running a business do good while doing well? Can they benefit society and the environmen...
Corporate law and scholarship generally assume that professional managers control public corporation...
Recent business scandals have focused attention on failures of corporate governance involving serio...
To economically oriented corporate law professors, distinguishing between directors\u27 fiduciary du...
Book Chapter Julian Velasco, Shareholder Primacy in Benefit Corporations, in Fiduciary Obligations i...
The question underpinning whether directors can legitimately consider and balance other constituents...
The question of how fiduciary duties should be allocated within the public corporation has been the ...
This study sets out to answer the question whether compliance with the directors’ fiduciary duty to ...