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Articles 121 - 129 of 129
Full-Text Articles in Law
Annotated Bibliography
Michigan Journal of International Law
Corporate concentration of both a national and transnational character is one of the more oblique topics in antitrust literature. Books and articles in the area tend to focus on narrow aspects of this issue, or on the regulatory efforts of particular countries and international organizations. The annotations which follow highlight some of the leading writings on industrial concentration.
Change And Continuity In Legal Education, Roger C. Cramton
Change And Continuity In Legal Education, Roger C. Cramton
Michigan Law Review
Within this maelstrom of accelerating change, the American law school remains, by comparison, an island of stability. Change there has been; one of the purposes of this piece is to chronicle some major recent changes. But in broad outline the structure, method, and content of American legal education has remained remarkably untouched. Whether this demonstrates that American legal education is remarkably flexible in its adaptation to a changing legal environment or that it is irrelevant to social change, I leave to the reader.
Allan Smith--A Personal History, Lawrence B. Lindemer
Allan Smith--A Personal History, Lawrence B. Lindemer
Michigan Law Review
A tribute to Allan Smith
Allan Smith, Robben W. Fleming
Corporate Governance--A Moving Target, Robert L. Knauss
Corporate Governance--A Moving Target, Robert L. Knauss
Michigan Law Review
This Essay elaborates on Professor Conard's sensible suggestion with the hope that others will take it to heart. First, the Essay discusses the unique governance problems raised by what I call quasipublicly traded corporations. These smaller corporations, whose shares are not actively traded, have been largely neglected in most discussions of corporate governance. The neglect is ironic since most state corporation statutes were originally designed with the quasipublicly traded corporation in mind. Second, the Essay turns to a problem of corporate governance common to all corporations - the proper role of directors - and shows that appropriate standards may vary …
Recent Developments In The Struggle For Probate Reform, Richard V. Wellman
Recent Developments In The Struggle For Probate Reform, Richard V. Wellman
Michigan Law Review
The two Als being honored by this issue have honored me with years of precious friendship and many words a!!-d acts of support and encouragement. In return, they and their friends and others who may peruse these pages prepared as they near retirement really deserve better reading than can be expected of an article that wallows in the dreadful details of legislation dealing with probate procedure. Conard and Smith are old hands when it comes to efforts at improvement of law and legal institutions. They know better than to immerse themselves deeply in a piece like the one that follows, …
Alfred Conard, Stanley Siegel
Alfred Conard, Jeffrey O'Connell
Alfred Conard, Guido Calabresi