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Full-Text Articles in Law

Don't Ban The Bars: Why The South Carolina General Assembly Should Decline To Adopt A Revenue Requirement For Liquor Licenses, C. William Bootle Ii Jul 2022

Don't Ban The Bars: Why The South Carolina General Assembly Should Decline To Adopt A Revenue Requirement For Liquor Licenses, C. William Bootle Ii

South Carolina Law Review

No abstract provided.


Unequal Investment: A Regulatory Case Study, Emily R. Winston Jan 2022

Unequal Investment: A Regulatory Case Study, Emily R. Winston

Faculty Publications

Growing economic inequality in the United States has reduced social mobility, placing financial security farther out of reach for a growing number of Americans. During the COVID-19 pandemic, U.S. stock prices have grown simultaneously with unemployment and food insecurity, highlighting the fact that prosperity is unequally distributed in the U.S. economy.

Many Americans do not benefit when the stock market soars because they do not have the means to invest. However, even ordinary American families who do have wealth to invest in the capital markets will face enormous obstacles in narrowing the wealth divide through investment. This is because ordinary …


Covid-19 And Business Interruption Insurance: The Constitutionality Of Legislatively Mandated Coverage, William G. Arnold Jul 2021

Covid-19 And Business Interruption Insurance: The Constitutionality Of Legislatively Mandated Coverage, William G. Arnold

South Carolina Law Review

No abstract provided.


The Operation Of Supervisory Colleges In Eu Banking Supervision: A Case Study Of Soft Law Becoming Hard Law, Duncan E. Alford Jan 2021

The Operation Of Supervisory Colleges In Eu Banking Supervision: A Case Study Of Soft Law Becoming Hard Law, Duncan E. Alford

Faculty Publications

In this paper, I consider the case of supervisory cooperation among bank regulators where voluntary cooperation (soft law) over a period of 50 years has become hard law (regulations and directives) within the European Union. Driven by major international bank failures or financial crises, international standards for prudential supervisory cooperation among bank regulators have steadily developed and become more precise and defined since the early 1970s.


Pertuis V. Front Roe Restaurants, Inc.: Equity Restores The Corporate Veil In Single-Business Enterprise Theory, Adair B. Patterson Jul 2019

Pertuis V. Front Roe Restaurants, Inc.: Equity Restores The Corporate Veil In Single-Business Enterprise Theory, Adair B. Patterson

South Carolina Law Review

No abstract provided.


Reforming The Global Value Chain Through Transnational Private Regulation, Kishanthi Parella Jan 2015

Reforming The Global Value Chain Through Transnational Private Regulation, Kishanthi Parella

South Carolina Journal of International Law and Business

No abstract provided.


International Financial Reforms: Capital Standards, Resolution Regimes And Supervisory Colleges, And Their Effect On Emerging Markets, Duncan E. Alford Jan 2013

International Financial Reforms: Capital Standards, Resolution Regimes And Supervisory Colleges, And Their Effect On Emerging Markets, Duncan E. Alford

Faculty Publications

This paper focuses on the relevance to emerging economies of three major financial reforms following the global financial crisis of 2007–2009: (1) the improved capital requirements intended to reduce the risk of bank failure (“Basel III”), (2) the improved recovery and resolution regimes for global banks, and (3) the development of supervisory colleges of cross-border financial institutions to improve supervisory cooperation and convergence. The paper also addresses the implications of these regulatory reforms for Asian emerging markets.


From The Schoolhouse To The Poorhouse: The Credit Card Act's Failure To Adequately Protect Young Consumers, Eboni S. Nelson Jan 2011

From The Schoolhouse To The Poorhouse: The Credit Card Act's Failure To Adequately Protect Young Consumers, Eboni S. Nelson

Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


Incentivizing Economic Development: An Empirical Examination Of The Use Of Grants And Loans, Robert T. Greenbaum, Daniele Bondonio Jan 2011

Incentivizing Economic Development: An Empirical Examination Of The Use Of Grants And Loans, Robert T. Greenbaum, Daniele Bondonio

South Carolina Journal of International Law and Business

No abstract provided.


Giving State Tax Incentives To Corporations: How Much Is Too Much?, Kathleen E. Mcdavid Jan 2011

Giving State Tax Incentives To Corporations: How Much Is Too Much?, Kathleen E. Mcdavid

South Carolina Journal of International Law and Business

No abstract provided.


A Contractual Approach To Shareholder Oppression Law, Benjamin Means Dec 2010

A Contractual Approach To Shareholder Oppression Law, Benjamin Means

Faculty Publications

According to standard law and economics, minority shareholders in closely held corporations must bargain against opportunism by controlling shareholders before investing. Put simply, you made your bed, now you must lie in it. Yet most courts offer a remedy for shareholder oppression, often premised on the notion that controlling shareholders owe fiduciary duties to the minority or must honor the minority's reasonable expectations. Thus, law and economics, the dominant mode of corporate law scholarship, appears irreconcilably opposed to minority shareholder protection, a defining feature of the existing law of close corporations.

This Article contends that a more nuanced theory of …


Supervisory Colleges: The Global Financial Crisis And Improving International Supervisory Coordination, Duncan E. Alford Jan 2010

Supervisory Colleges: The Global Financial Crisis And Improving International Supervisory Coordination, Duncan E. Alford

Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


The Subprime Mortgage Crisis: Will It Change Foreign Investment In Us Markets?, Lindsay Joyner Jan 2008

The Subprime Mortgage Crisis: Will It Change Foreign Investment In Us Markets?, Lindsay Joyner

South Carolina Journal of International Law and Business

No abstract provided.


Core Principles For Effective Banking Supervision: An Enforceable International Financial Standard?, Duncan E. Alford Apr 2005

Core Principles For Effective Banking Supervision: An Enforceable International Financial Standard?, Duncan E. Alford

Faculty Publications

The Basel Committee on Banking Supervision serves as an international forum to discuss international bank supervision issues. Because of the gravity and frequency of banking crises since the demise of the Bretton Woods System in the early 1970s, international financial standards have emerged as a method to minimize these crises. In 1998, the Basel Committee issued a comprehensive standard on bank super vision that built upon its work over the previous two and a half decades. In this Article, the author analyzes this comprehensive standard the Core Principles for Effective Banking Supervision-and assesses its implementation in the European Union, the …


Anti-Money Laundering Regulations: A Burden On Financial Institutions, Duncan E. Alford Jul 1994

Anti-Money Laundering Regulations: A Burden On Financial Institutions, Duncan E. Alford

Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.