The great corporate scandals of the recent past and the resulting push for legal reform have revived the role of the shareholder in the corporation as a subject of great debate. Those who favor an expanded role for shareholders in corporate governance tend to focus on developing new legal rights for shareholders, and their critics respond with reasons why such rights are unnecessary and inappropriate. While these issues certainly are worthy of consideration, issues concerning existing shareholder rights are more fundamental. If existing rights are adequate or could be improved, then new rights may not be necessary; but if existing rights cannot be salvaged, then efforts to add new rights may be equally unavailing. In this article, I argue t...
The consensus around shareholder primacy is crumbling. Investors, long assumed to be uncomplicated p...
The shareholder empowerment debate in corporate law is premised upon a reoccurring assumption that, ...
The consensus around shareholder primacy is crumbling. Investors, long assumed to be uncomplicated p...
The great corporate scandals of the recent past and the resulting push for legal reform have revived...
Shareholders have many legal rights, but they are not all of equal significance. This article will a...
Corporate law and scholarship generally assume that professional managers control public corporation...
The fundamental assumptions of corporate law have changed little in decades. Accepted as truth are t...
According to the traditional view, the shareholders own the corporation. Until relatively recently, ...
This article considers the effect that increased shareholder activism may have on non-shareholder co...
In the past decades, shareholder democracy has been the center of attention in corporate governance ...
The default rules of corporate law make shareholders’ control rights a function of their voting powe...
This article examines a new corporate law remedy: the ability of courts to remove directors of busin...
More often than not discussion about shareholders has been around the idea of shareholder rights. Th...
Shareholders’ rights advocates argue that shareholders have the right to control the corporation. Th...
The time is ripe for a critical analysis of the scope of directors' duties, the role of shareholder ...
The consensus around shareholder primacy is crumbling. Investors, long assumed to be uncomplicated p...
The shareholder empowerment debate in corporate law is premised upon a reoccurring assumption that, ...
The consensus around shareholder primacy is crumbling. Investors, long assumed to be uncomplicated p...
The great corporate scandals of the recent past and the resulting push for legal reform have revived...
Shareholders have many legal rights, but they are not all of equal significance. This article will a...
Corporate law and scholarship generally assume that professional managers control public corporation...
The fundamental assumptions of corporate law have changed little in decades. Accepted as truth are t...
According to the traditional view, the shareholders own the corporation. Until relatively recently, ...
This article considers the effect that increased shareholder activism may have on non-shareholder co...
In the past decades, shareholder democracy has been the center of attention in corporate governance ...
The default rules of corporate law make shareholders’ control rights a function of their voting powe...
This article examines a new corporate law remedy: the ability of courts to remove directors of busin...
More often than not discussion about shareholders has been around the idea of shareholder rights. Th...
Shareholders’ rights advocates argue that shareholders have the right to control the corporation. Th...
The time is ripe for a critical analysis of the scope of directors' duties, the role of shareholder ...
The consensus around shareholder primacy is crumbling. Investors, long assumed to be uncomplicated p...
The shareholder empowerment debate in corporate law is premised upon a reoccurring assumption that, ...
The consensus around shareholder primacy is crumbling. Investors, long assumed to be uncomplicated p...