The optimal allocation of authority among executives, directors, and shareholders of public companies has been debated as long as there have been public companies, and the issue now seems further from resolution than ever. In recent years Sweden has changed its corporate governance system by delegating the nomination of corporate directors (and thus, in effect, ultimate control) to committees typically comprising representatives of each company’s largest shareholders. This system gives shareholders a degree of power “that only the most daring corporate governance initiatives in the rest of the world could even imagine.”1 The change is a big success—it has pleased many corporate constituencies without upsetting any. Part I of this Article de...
Corporate governance is the study of the distribution of rights and responsibilities among different...
This article reviews Germany''s corporate governance system and the effectiveness of recent reforms....
The literature shows that good corporate governance generally pays—for firms, for mar-kets, and for ...
Sweden has changed its corporate governance system by delegating the nomination of corporate directo...
The optimal allocation of authority among executives, directors, and shareholders of public companie...
The Nordic Region is remarkable in many ways and has been the subject of increasing interest over th...
The focus of comparative corporate governance scholarship is shifting from takeovers to controlling ...
The fundamental problem of corporate governance in the United States isto alleviate the conflict of ...
Since the late 1990s, the corporate governance of state-owned companies (SOCs) has moved to the fore...
The consensus around shareholder primacy is crumbling. Investors, long assumed to be uncomplicated p...
Publicly traded companies make up only a small fraction of the vast number of corporations operating...
Corporate governance in the United States is about alleviating the conflict of interest between disp...
International audienceWhy take an interest in corporate governance? This topic does not necessarily ...
Despite a number of corporate governance reforms introduced following an Anglo-American blueprint, t...
Comparative corporate governance is both necessary and hard. Recent scholarship has identified the p...
Corporate governance is the study of the distribution of rights and responsibilities among different...
This article reviews Germany''s corporate governance system and the effectiveness of recent reforms....
The literature shows that good corporate governance generally pays—for firms, for mar-kets, and for ...
Sweden has changed its corporate governance system by delegating the nomination of corporate directo...
The optimal allocation of authority among executives, directors, and shareholders of public companie...
The Nordic Region is remarkable in many ways and has been the subject of increasing interest over th...
The focus of comparative corporate governance scholarship is shifting from takeovers to controlling ...
The fundamental problem of corporate governance in the United States isto alleviate the conflict of ...
Since the late 1990s, the corporate governance of state-owned companies (SOCs) has moved to the fore...
The consensus around shareholder primacy is crumbling. Investors, long assumed to be uncomplicated p...
Publicly traded companies make up only a small fraction of the vast number of corporations operating...
Corporate governance in the United States is about alleviating the conflict of interest between disp...
International audienceWhy take an interest in corporate governance? This topic does not necessarily ...
Despite a number of corporate governance reforms introduced following an Anglo-American blueprint, t...
Comparative corporate governance is both necessary and hard. Recent scholarship has identified the p...
Corporate governance is the study of the distribution of rights and responsibilities among different...
This article reviews Germany''s corporate governance system and the effectiveness of recent reforms....
The literature shows that good corporate governance generally pays—for firms, for mar-kets, and for ...