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Legal Ethics and Professional Responsibility Commons™
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- Keyword
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- Compliance officer; compliance; enforcement; regulation; regulators; personal liability; protections; whistleblower; whistleblower protections; chief compliance officers; SEC; FinCEN; Dodd-Frank Act; workplace culture; management; organizational governance; chilling effect; retaliation protection; Bank Secrecy Act; BSA; National Society of Compliance Professionals; NSCP; FINRA; CCO; CEO; CFO; non-regulation; Society of Corporate Compliance and Ethics; SCCE; Compliance Certification Board; CCB; Sarbanes-Oxley Act; Dodd-Frank 78u-6(h); Digital Realty Trust v. Somers; Model Rule of Professional Conduct 1.13 (1)
- Compliance; legitimacy; employees; perception; ethics; reform; corporate culture; reporting; standards; management; officer; oversight; finance; incentives; rational; moral disengagement; social norms; ethical behavior; violations; rationalizations; fraud; deceptive; committee; CECO; board of directors; monitoring; measurements; annual report (1)
- Corporate social responsibility; CSR; compliance; regulation; mandates; disclosure; due dilligence; self-regulation; China; India; Companies Act of 2013; France; Duty of Vigilance Law; Switzerland; European Union; Directive on the Disclosure of Non-Financial Information; SEC; Regulation S-K; Concept Release; Dodd-Frank; ESG; California; California Tranparency in Supply Chains Act; prevention; detection; investigation; remediation; Organization for Economic Coopertion and Development; OECD; Non-governmental Organizations; NGOs; New Governance Theory (1)
- SEC; Commission; Enforcement; Enforcement Actions; Rule 102; 102; mandatory referral; attorney discipline; attorney conduct; attorney (1)
Articles 1 - 4 of 4
Full-Text Articles in Legal Ethics and Professional Responsibility
Chipping Away At Compliance: How Compliance Programs Lose Legitimacy And Its Impact On Unethical Behavior, David Hess
Chipping Away At Compliance: How Compliance Programs Lose Legitimacy And Its Impact On Unethical Behavior, David Hess
Brooklyn Journal of Corporate, Financial & Commercial Law
Employee perceptions of an organization’s compliance program are critical. A program that has lost legitimacy with its employees is not just ineffective, but it creates more harm than good by leading to more unethical behavior. This Article identifies ways in which compliance programs can start to lose legitimacy, explains how that lost legitimacy leads to increased wrongdoing, and then concludes by setting out some basic reforms focused on helping stop this downward spiral and protecting the legitimacy of the compliance function.
Compliance Officers: Personal Liability, Protections, And Posture, Jennifer M. Pacella
Compliance Officers: Personal Liability, Protections, And Posture, Jennifer M. Pacella
Brooklyn Journal of Corporate, Financial & Commercial Law
This Symposium Article will explore the evolving nature of the regulatory and enforcement landscape as it pertains to compliance officers, specifically regarding their susceptibility to personal liability. It will examine the posture of compliance officers in three contexts: i) as a possible target for enforcement activity by regulators; ii) as a quasi-professional subject to a current regime of “non-regulation”; and iii) as an employee in need of ample whistleblower protections, each of which create implications for a compliance officer’s risk of personal liability and protections as a constituent of the organization monitored. After considering the current guidance surrounding enforcement activity …
Social Responsibility Regulation And Its Challenges To Corporate Compliance, Stephen Kim Park
Social Responsibility Regulation And Its Challenges To Corporate Compliance, Stephen Kim Park
Brooklyn Journal of Corporate, Financial & Commercial Law
This Article addresses the intersection of corporate social responsibility and corporate compliance. In this context, the focus of this Article is on regulation that seeks to enhance socially responsible corporate conduct and its implications for the compliance function. Social responsibility regulation raises operational concerns for companies, including problems associated with assessing social performance, the proliferation and fragmentation of legal obligations, and the contested nature of the social issues that it addresses. As laws mandating socially responsible corporate conduct continue to grow in number and expand in scope, corporations will increasingly need to acknowledge and respond to these challenges.
Why Does The Sec Hate Lawyers And Will The Bitterness Ever Go Away: A Review Of The Reasons For The Current State Of This Relationship And A Proposed Path Forward, Ernest Edward Badway, Joshua Horn, Christie Mcguinness
Why Does The Sec Hate Lawyers And Will The Bitterness Ever Go Away: A Review Of The Reasons For The Current State Of This Relationship And A Proposed Path Forward, Ernest Edward Badway, Joshua Horn, Christie Mcguinness
Brooklyn Journal of Corporate, Financial & Commercial Law
The United States Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC” or “Commission”) and its staff (“Staff”) have brought numerous actions against lawyers in a variety of contexts over the last several years. These enforcement actions have arguably prevented zealous advocacy as well as potentially leaving lawyers reluctant to make certain arguments on behalf of their clients so as to avoid potential disciplinary actions against them. While it is important for the Commission and its Staff to ensure that lawyers do not engage in violative conduct, this Article notes that the SEC and its Staff’s actions should be limited to only those occasions …