Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Institution
- Keyword
-
- Corporate governance (7)
- SSRN (4)
- Agency costs (3)
- Corporation law (3)
- Financial crises (3)
-
- Liability (Law) (3)
- Risk management (3)
- Acquisitions (2)
- Agency (Law) (2)
- Corporate governance--Law and legislation (2)
- Corporate law (2)
- Corporate speech (2)
- Equity compensation (2)
- ACA (1)
- Acquisition (1)
- Affordable Care Act (1)
- Alternative litigation funding (1)
- Asymmetric information (1)
- Burwell v. Hobby Lobby (1)
- Business Organizations (1)
- Business enterprises--Law and legislation (1)
- Business organizations (1)
- Business--Religious aspects (1)
- By-laws (1)
- C-corporations (1)
- CEO primacy (1)
- CO2 permits (1)
- Campaign finance (1)
- Capital structure (1)
- Central banks (1)
Articles 31 - 38 of 38
Full-Text Articles in Law
Keynote Reflections: The Public Governance Duty, Steven L. Schwarcz
Keynote Reflections: The Public Governance Duty, Steven L. Schwarcz
Faculty Scholarship
Firms must take ever greater risks to try to innovate and create value in our increasingly competitive and complex global economy. Corporate governance law generally delegates control over excessive risk-taking to the firm’s investors, principally its risk-seeking shareholders. But this does not cover the type of risk-taking that led to the global financial crisis and that is becoming ever more common - risk-taking that could have systemic consequences to the financial system. I argue for a “public governance duty,” requiring managers of systemically important firms to assess the impact of risk-taking on the public as well as on investors, and …
Corporate Law And The Limits Of Private Ordering, James D. Cox
Corporate Law And The Limits Of Private Ordering, James D. Cox
Faculty Scholarship
Solomon-like, the Delaware legislature in 2015 split the baby by amending the Delaware General Corporation Law to authorize forum-selection bylaws and to prohibit charter or bylaw provisions that would shift to the plaintiff defense costs incurred in connection with shareholder suits that were not successfully concluded. The legislature acted after the Boilermakers Local 154 Retirement Fund. v. Chevron Corp ATP Tour, Inc. v. Deutscher Tennis Bund, broadly empowered the board vis-à-vis the shareholders through the board’s power to amend the bylaws. Repeatedly the analysis used by each court referenced the contractual relationship the shareholders had through the articles of …
Corporate Risk-Taking And The Decline Of Personal Blame, Steven L. Schwarcz
Corporate Risk-Taking And The Decline Of Personal Blame, Steven L. Schwarcz
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Licensing Commercial Value: From Copyright To Trademarks And Back, Jane C. Ginsburg
Licensing Commercial Value: From Copyright To Trademarks And Back, Jane C. Ginsburg
Faculty Scholarship
Copyright and trademarks often overlap, particularly in visual characters. The same figure may qualify as a pictorial, graphic or sculptural work on the one hand, and as a registered (or at least used) trademark on the other. The two rights, though resting on distinct foundations, tend to be licensed together. Trademarks symbolize the goodwill of the producer, and are protected insofar as copying that symbol is likely to confuse consumers as to the source or approval of the goods or services in connection with which the mark is used. For famous marks, the dilution action grants a right against uses …
Ex Ante Choice Of Jury Waiver Clauses In Mergers, Darius Palia, Robert E. Scott
Ex Ante Choice Of Jury Waiver Clauses In Mergers, Darius Palia, Robert E. Scott
Faculty Scholarship
This paper examines empirically why sophisticated parties in some merger and acquisition deals choose to waive their right to jury trials and some do not. We examine merger agreements for a large sample of 276 deals for the 11-year period 2001 to 2011. We exclude private company deals and those where the choice of forum and law is Delaware. First, we find that 48.2% of the deals have jury waiver clauses. Second, we find that deals in which New York is chosen as the governing law and forum state are more likely to include a jury waiver clause. No other …
Innovation And The Role Of Public-Private Collaboration In Contract Governance: Governing Global Finance: Towards Contractual Governance, Katharina Pistor
Innovation And The Role Of Public-Private Collaboration In Contract Governance: Governing Global Finance: Towards Contractual Governance, Katharina Pistor
Faculty Scholarship
The global financial crisis demonstrated the vulnerability, if not failure, of existing governance structures for financial markets. Even if it is true that financial crises cannot be avoided, there may be room for improving existing structures. This chapter suggests that such an improvement might lie in switching from exclusive, hierarchical, and coercive forms of governance to inclusive, horizontal, cooperative ones—and uses the shorthand ‘contractual governance’ for the latter. Starting from the presumption that new forms of governance are frequently born in crisis, the chapter analyses several responses to the crisis and asks whether they display features of alternative forms of …
Does Google Content Degrade Google Search? Experimental Evidence, Michael Luca, Tim Wu, Sebastian Couvidat, Daniel Frank
Does Google Content Degrade Google Search? Experimental Evidence, Michael Luca, Tim Wu, Sebastian Couvidat, Daniel Frank
Faculty Scholarship
While Google is known primarily as a search engine, it has increasingly developed and promoted its own content as an alternative to results from other websites. By prominently displaying Google content in response to search queries, Google is able to use its dominance in search to gain customers for this content. This may reduce consumer welfare if the internal content is inferior to organic search results. In this paper, we provide a legal and empirical analysis of this practice in the domain of online reviews. We first identify the conditions under which universal search would be considered anticompetitive. We then …
Delaware’S Implied Contractual Covenant Of Good Faith And “Sibling Rivalry” Among Equity Holders, Daniel S. Kleinberger
Delaware’S Implied Contractual Covenant Of Good Faith And “Sibling Rivalry” Among Equity Holders, Daniel S. Kleinberger
Faculty Scholarship
An obligation of good faith and fair dealing is implied in every common law contract and is codified in the Uniform Commercial Code (“U.C.C”). The terminology differs: Some jurisdictions refer to an “implied covenant;” others to an “implied contractual obligation;” still others to an “implied duty.” But whatever the label, the concept is understood by the vast majority of U.S. lawyers as a matter of commercial rather than entity law. And, to the vast majority of corporate lawyers, “good faith” does not mean contract law but rather conjures up an important aspect of a corporate director’s duty of loyalty.
Nonetheless, …