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Full-Text Articles in Law
Corporate Social Responsibility, Uche Ewelukwa Ofodile, Chisara Ezie, Nigel Roberts, Dr. Corinne Lewis, Constance Wagner, Claudia Feldkamp, Michael Judin
Corporate Social Responsibility, Uche Ewelukwa Ofodile, Chisara Ezie, Nigel Roberts, Dr. Corinne Lewis, Constance Wagner, Claudia Feldkamp, Michael Judin
The Year in Review
No abstract provided.
International M&A And Joint Ventures, Vanesa Balda, Marilen Figueroa, Jose Otavio Pinheiro Olivero, Gordon N. Cameron, Laura Fraser, Francisco Ugarte, Lucille Barale, H. Jayesh, Aditi Bagri, Aaheree Mukherjee, Nicolas Van Heule, Eva Das, Frederik De Hosson, Elena Cuatrecasas, Isabel Gandoy, Timur Bondaryev, Alex L. Khakarian, Joseph J. Basile
International M&A And Joint Ventures, Vanesa Balda, Marilen Figueroa, Jose Otavio Pinheiro Olivero, Gordon N. Cameron, Laura Fraser, Francisco Ugarte, Lucille Barale, H. Jayesh, Aditi Bagri, Aaheree Mukherjee, Nicolas Van Heule, Eva Das, Frederik De Hosson, Elena Cuatrecasas, Isabel Gandoy, Timur Bondaryev, Alex L. Khakarian, Joseph J. Basile
The Year in Review
No abstract provided.
Autonomous Business Reality, Carla L. Reyes
Autonomous Business Reality, Carla L. Reyes
Faculty Journal Articles and Book Chapters
Society tends to expect technology to do more than it can actually achieve, at a faster pace than it can actually move. The resulting hype cycle infects all forms of discourse around technology. Unfortunately, the discourse on law and technology is no exception to this rule. The resulting discussion is often characterized by two or more positions at opposite ends of the spectrum, such that participants in the discussion speak past each other, rather than to each other. The rich context that sits in the middle ground goes disregarded altogether. This dynamic most recently surfaced in the legal literature regarding …
Codeterminination In Theory And Practice, Grant M. Hayden, Matthew T. Bodie
Codeterminination In Theory And Practice, Grant M. Hayden, Matthew T. Bodie
Faculty Journal Articles and Book Chapters
Codetermination—a system of shared corporate governance between shareholders and workers—has been mostly ignored within the U.S. corporate governance literature. When it has made an appearance, it has largely served as a foil for shareholder primacy and as an example of corporate deviance. However, over the last fifteen years—and especially in the last five—empirical research on codetermination has shown surprising results as to the system’s efficiency, resilience, and benefits to stakeholders.
This Article reviews the extant American legal scholarship on codetermination and provides a fresh look at the current state of codetermination theory and practice. Rather than experiencing the failures predicted …