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Foxes At The Henhouse: Occupational Licensing Boards Up Close, Rebecca Haw Allensworth
Foxes At The Henhouse: Occupational Licensing Boards Up Close, Rebecca Haw Allensworth
Vanderbilt Law School Faculty Publications
The dark side of occupational licensing-its tendency to raise prices to consumers with dubious effects on service quality, its enormous payout to licensees, and its ability to shut many willing workers out of the workforce-has begun to receive significant attention. But little has been said about the legal institutions that create and administer this web of professional entry and practice rules. State-level licensing boards regulate nearly one-third of American workers, yet, until now, there has been no systematic attempt to understand who serves on these boards and how they operate. This Article undertakes an ambitious and comprehensive study of all …
Ceo Side Payments In Mergers And Acquisitions, Brian Broughman
Ceo Side Payments In Mergers And Acquisitions, Brian Broughman
Vanderbilt Law School Faculty Publications
In addition to golden parachutes, CEOs often negotiate for personal side payments in connection with the sale of their firms. Side payments differ from golden parachutes in that they are negotiated ex post in connection with a specific acquisition proposal, whereas golden parachutes are part of the executive’s employment agreement negotiated when she is hired. While side payments may benefit shareholders by countering managerial resistance to an efficient sale, they can also be used to redistribute merger proceeds to management. This Article highlights an overlooked distinction between pre-merger golden parachutes and merger side payments. Similar to a legislative rider attached …
Justice Scalia And Class Actions, Brian T. Fitzpatrick
Justice Scalia And Class Actions, Brian T. Fitzpatrick
Vanderbilt Law School Faculty Publications
I have been asked to write an essay on Justice Scalia's class action jurisprudence and although I suspect many readers will find this surprising because the Justice is so often linked to constitutional law, I actually think that his class action jurisprudence may be where his opinions leave some of the biggest marks. To be as blunt about it as the Justice himself would have been: for better or for worse, I am not sure any other Justice of the Supreme Court in American history has done more to hinder the class action lawsuit than Justice Scalia did.
The Justice …