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Legal Economics And The Canadian Accredited Investor Standard: Efficiency As A Proxy For Change, Jeremy White Sep 2021

Legal Economics And The Canadian Accredited Investor Standard: Efficiency As A Proxy For Change, Jeremy White

Master of Laws Research Papers Repository

This paper takes a legal-economic approach in assessing the current accredited investor standard that exists as part of Canada’s securities laws. An accredited investor is often characterized as an individual that, due to his or her wealth, may participate in certain investment opportunities that would otherwise not be available. Canada’s National Instrument 45-106 views accredited investors as those with a unique ability to understand financial markets, and due to this level of understanding, the typical disclosure protections afforded to the public—mainly, the prospectus—are not necessary to these individuals.

A legal-economic approach to the accredited investor standard looks at the system …


Towards A Better Explanation Of Law And Economics: Revisiting Rational Choice Theory And The Market As A Framework For Legal Decisions, Sophie Stoyan Sep 2020

Towards A Better Explanation Of Law And Economics: Revisiting Rational Choice Theory And The Market As A Framework For Legal Decisions, Sophie Stoyan

Master of Laws Research Papers Repository

As one of the most popular and influential legal ideologies since its inception in the late 1950s and early 1960s, there is a vast wealth of law and economics scholarship with remarkable breadth encompassing nearly every area of law. Yet despite the abundance of scholarship examining legal issues through a law and economics lens, there is comparatively little literature explaining law and economics itself. This paper seeks to overcome this gap in the literature by more clearly explaining the economic concepts on which the theory is built and the connections between these concepts. In other words, this paper aims to …


Extending Graham's Interpretive Theory Into Common Law: A Multiple-Case Study, Chris Hayes Apr 2016

Extending Graham's Interpretive Theory Into Common Law: A Multiple-Case Study, Chris Hayes

Master of Studies in Law Research Papers Repository

What determines the outcome of judicial decisions? A traditional answer to this question is that it involves a complex application of rules derived from the reasons for judgment of analogous common law decisions and applicable statutes under the doctrine of stare decisis. This answer is problematic. One significant problem of this answer is its inability to explain the outcome of cases where the judgment does not appear to be based on these traditionally recognized sources. An alternative answer, provided by a particular field of legal scholarship, Legal Realism, posits that “other” factors make a significant impact on the outcome …


Corporate Social Responsibility In Canadian Banking A Case Study On The Equator Principles, Ian Osellame Aug 2013

Corporate Social Responsibility In Canadian Banking A Case Study On The Equator Principles, Ian Osellame

Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository

This thesis considers the role of Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) in the Canadian banking sector. Although the relevance of CSR continues to be debated, this analysis starts from the position that CSR is now a fact of life for modern banks and tests whether Canadian banks are demonstrating CSR behavior through their adoption of the Equator Principles: a series of guidelines on the management of social and environmental issues that banks voluntarily commit to follow in their project financing activities. This thesis concludes that examples of CSR behavior can be observed as Canadian banks continue to define the scope of …