Cambridge Handbook of Institutional Investment and Fiduciary Duty
Herausgeber: Hawley, James P; Waitzer, Edward J; Sandberg, Joakim; Johnson, Keith L; Hoepner, Andreas G F
Cambridge Handbook of Institutional Investment and Fiduciary Duty
Herausgeber: Hawley, James P; Waitzer, Edward J; Sandberg, Joakim; Johnson, Keith L; Hoepner, Andreas G F
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A comprehensive reference work that explores recent changes and future trends in the principles that govern institutional investors and fiduciaries.
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A comprehensive reference work that explores recent changes and future trends in the principles that govern institutional investors and fiduciaries.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 507
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. Juni 2014
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 249mm x 170mm x 30mm
- Gewicht: 1021g
- ISBN-13: 9781107035874
- ISBN-10: 1107035872
- Artikelnr.: 41098390
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 507
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. Juni 2014
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 249mm x 170mm x 30mm
- Gewicht: 1021g
- ISBN-13: 9781107035874
- ISBN-10: 1107035872
- Artikelnr.: 41098390
1. Introduction; Part I. Fiduciary Duty: A Global Outlook: 2. The public
fiduciary - a Canadian perspective; 3. The basis of fiduciary duty in
investment in the United States; 4. Governance and accountability in UK
pension schemes; 5. Institutional investment and fiduciary duty in
Australia; 6. The regulation of institutional investment in Sweden: a
role-model for the promotion of responsible investment?; 7. The Dutch
pension system; Part II. Fiduciary Duty and the Landscape of Institutional
Investment: 8. The philanthropic fiduciary; 9. Paradigm lost:
employment-based defined benefit plans and the current understanding of
fiduciary duty; 10. Economically targeted investing: changing of the guard;
11. Institutional investment in the European Union Emissions Trading
Scheme; 12. Have institutional fiduciaries improved securities class
actions? A review of the empirical literature on the PSLRA's Lead Plaintiff
Provision; 13. The future of fiduciary obligation for institutional
investors; Part III. Challenging Conventional Wisdom on Fiduciary Duty: 14.
Is the search for excessive alpha a breach of fiduciary duty?; 15.
Fiduciary duty and sin stocks: is vice really nice?; 16. Whose risk
counts?; 17. Sustainability, financial markets and systemic risk; 18.
Uncertain times, plural rationalities and the pension fiduciary; 19.
Emotional finance and the fiduciary responsibility of asset managers; Part
IV. Towards a Broader Interpretation of Fiduciary Duty: 20. Fiduciary duty
and the search for a shared conception of sustainable investment; 21.
Pension fund fiduciary duty and its impacts on sustainable investing; 22.
Reason, rationality and fiduciary duty; 23. Socially responsible investment
and the conceptual limits of fiduciary duty; 24. Fiduciary duty at the
intersection of business and society; 25. Challenging conventional wisdom:
the role of investment tools, investment beliefs and industry conventions
in changing our interpretation of fiduciary duty; Part V. Beneficiaries'
Roles and Viewpoints: 26. The voice of the beneficiary; 27. Understanding
the attitudes of beneficiaries: should fiduciary duty include social,
ethical and environmental concerns?; 28. Operationalizing socially
responsible investment: a non-financial fiduciary duty problem; 29. The
preferences of beneficiaries: what can we learn from research on retail
investors?; Part VI. Fiduciary Duty and Governance: 30. Investors and
global governance frameworks: broadening the multi-stakeholder paradigm;
31. Investment fiduciaries, the role of the public corporation, and greater
commitments to sustainability: signals from the corporate board; 32.
Reporting and standards: tools for stewardship; 33. US corporate
governance, fiduciary success and stable economic growth; 34. Fulfilling
fiduciary duties in an imperfect world - governance recommendations from
the Stanford Institutional Investor Forum; 35. Addressing the participation
gap in institutional investment: an assessment framework and preliminary
results; 36. The costs of fiduciary failure - and an agenda for remedy;
Index.
fiduciary - a Canadian perspective; 3. The basis of fiduciary duty in
investment in the United States; 4. Governance and accountability in UK
pension schemes; 5. Institutional investment and fiduciary duty in
Australia; 6. The regulation of institutional investment in Sweden: a
role-model for the promotion of responsible investment?; 7. The Dutch
pension system; Part II. Fiduciary Duty and the Landscape of Institutional
Investment: 8. The philanthropic fiduciary; 9. Paradigm lost:
employment-based defined benefit plans and the current understanding of
fiduciary duty; 10. Economically targeted investing: changing of the guard;
11. Institutional investment in the European Union Emissions Trading
Scheme; 12. Have institutional fiduciaries improved securities class
actions? A review of the empirical literature on the PSLRA's Lead Plaintiff
Provision; 13. The future of fiduciary obligation for institutional
investors; Part III. Challenging Conventional Wisdom on Fiduciary Duty: 14.
Is the search for excessive alpha a breach of fiduciary duty?; 15.
Fiduciary duty and sin stocks: is vice really nice?; 16. Whose risk
counts?; 17. Sustainability, financial markets and systemic risk; 18.
Uncertain times, plural rationalities and the pension fiduciary; 19.
Emotional finance and the fiduciary responsibility of asset managers; Part
IV. Towards a Broader Interpretation of Fiduciary Duty: 20. Fiduciary duty
and the search for a shared conception of sustainable investment; 21.
Pension fund fiduciary duty and its impacts on sustainable investing; 22.
Reason, rationality and fiduciary duty; 23. Socially responsible investment
and the conceptual limits of fiduciary duty; 24. Fiduciary duty at the
intersection of business and society; 25. Challenging conventional wisdom:
the role of investment tools, investment beliefs and industry conventions
in changing our interpretation of fiduciary duty; Part V. Beneficiaries'
Roles and Viewpoints: 26. The voice of the beneficiary; 27. Understanding
the attitudes of beneficiaries: should fiduciary duty include social,
ethical and environmental concerns?; 28. Operationalizing socially
responsible investment: a non-financial fiduciary duty problem; 29. The
preferences of beneficiaries: what can we learn from research on retail
investors?; Part VI. Fiduciary Duty and Governance: 30. Investors and
global governance frameworks: broadening the multi-stakeholder paradigm;
31. Investment fiduciaries, the role of the public corporation, and greater
commitments to sustainability: signals from the corporate board; 32.
Reporting and standards: tools for stewardship; 33. US corporate
governance, fiduciary success and stable economic growth; 34. Fulfilling
fiduciary duties in an imperfect world - governance recommendations from
the Stanford Institutional Investor Forum; 35. Addressing the participation
gap in institutional investment: an assessment framework and preliminary
results; 36. The costs of fiduciary failure - and an agenda for remedy;
Index.
1. Introduction; Part I. Fiduciary Duty: A Global Outlook: 2. The public
fiduciary - a Canadian perspective; 3. The basis of fiduciary duty in
investment in the United States; 4. Governance and accountability in UK
pension schemes; 5. Institutional investment and fiduciary duty in
Australia; 6. The regulation of institutional investment in Sweden: a
role-model for the promotion of responsible investment?; 7. The Dutch
pension system; Part II. Fiduciary Duty and the Landscape of Institutional
Investment: 8. The philanthropic fiduciary; 9. Paradigm lost:
employment-based defined benefit plans and the current understanding of
fiduciary duty; 10. Economically targeted investing: changing of the guard;
11. Institutional investment in the European Union Emissions Trading
Scheme; 12. Have institutional fiduciaries improved securities class
actions? A review of the empirical literature on the PSLRA's Lead Plaintiff
Provision; 13. The future of fiduciary obligation for institutional
investors; Part III. Challenging Conventional Wisdom on Fiduciary Duty: 14.
Is the search for excessive alpha a breach of fiduciary duty?; 15.
Fiduciary duty and sin stocks: is vice really nice?; 16. Whose risk
counts?; 17. Sustainability, financial markets and systemic risk; 18.
Uncertain times, plural rationalities and the pension fiduciary; 19.
Emotional finance and the fiduciary responsibility of asset managers; Part
IV. Towards a Broader Interpretation of Fiduciary Duty: 20. Fiduciary duty
and the search for a shared conception of sustainable investment; 21.
Pension fund fiduciary duty and its impacts on sustainable investing; 22.
Reason, rationality and fiduciary duty; 23. Socially responsible investment
and the conceptual limits of fiduciary duty; 24. Fiduciary duty at the
intersection of business and society; 25. Challenging conventional wisdom:
the role of investment tools, investment beliefs and industry conventions
in changing our interpretation of fiduciary duty; Part V. Beneficiaries'
Roles and Viewpoints: 26. The voice of the beneficiary; 27. Understanding
the attitudes of beneficiaries: should fiduciary duty include social,
ethical and environmental concerns?; 28. Operationalizing socially
responsible investment: a non-financial fiduciary duty problem; 29. The
preferences of beneficiaries: what can we learn from research on retail
investors?; Part VI. Fiduciary Duty and Governance: 30. Investors and
global governance frameworks: broadening the multi-stakeholder paradigm;
31. Investment fiduciaries, the role of the public corporation, and greater
commitments to sustainability: signals from the corporate board; 32.
Reporting and standards: tools for stewardship; 33. US corporate
governance, fiduciary success and stable economic growth; 34. Fulfilling
fiduciary duties in an imperfect world - governance recommendations from
the Stanford Institutional Investor Forum; 35. Addressing the participation
gap in institutional investment: an assessment framework and preliminary
results; 36. The costs of fiduciary failure - and an agenda for remedy;
Index.
fiduciary - a Canadian perspective; 3. The basis of fiduciary duty in
investment in the United States; 4. Governance and accountability in UK
pension schemes; 5. Institutional investment and fiduciary duty in
Australia; 6. The regulation of institutional investment in Sweden: a
role-model for the promotion of responsible investment?; 7. The Dutch
pension system; Part II. Fiduciary Duty and the Landscape of Institutional
Investment: 8. The philanthropic fiduciary; 9. Paradigm lost:
employment-based defined benefit plans and the current understanding of
fiduciary duty; 10. Economically targeted investing: changing of the guard;
11. Institutional investment in the European Union Emissions Trading
Scheme; 12. Have institutional fiduciaries improved securities class
actions? A review of the empirical literature on the PSLRA's Lead Plaintiff
Provision; 13. The future of fiduciary obligation for institutional
investors; Part III. Challenging Conventional Wisdom on Fiduciary Duty: 14.
Is the search for excessive alpha a breach of fiduciary duty?; 15.
Fiduciary duty and sin stocks: is vice really nice?; 16. Whose risk
counts?; 17. Sustainability, financial markets and systemic risk; 18.
Uncertain times, plural rationalities and the pension fiduciary; 19.
Emotional finance and the fiduciary responsibility of asset managers; Part
IV. Towards a Broader Interpretation of Fiduciary Duty: 20. Fiduciary duty
and the search for a shared conception of sustainable investment; 21.
Pension fund fiduciary duty and its impacts on sustainable investing; 22.
Reason, rationality and fiduciary duty; 23. Socially responsible investment
and the conceptual limits of fiduciary duty; 24. Fiduciary duty at the
intersection of business and society; 25. Challenging conventional wisdom:
the role of investment tools, investment beliefs and industry conventions
in changing our interpretation of fiduciary duty; Part V. Beneficiaries'
Roles and Viewpoints: 26. The voice of the beneficiary; 27. Understanding
the attitudes of beneficiaries: should fiduciary duty include social,
ethical and environmental concerns?; 28. Operationalizing socially
responsible investment: a non-financial fiduciary duty problem; 29. The
preferences of beneficiaries: what can we learn from research on retail
investors?; Part VI. Fiduciary Duty and Governance: 30. Investors and
global governance frameworks: broadening the multi-stakeholder paradigm;
31. Investment fiduciaries, the role of the public corporation, and greater
commitments to sustainability: signals from the corporate board; 32.
Reporting and standards: tools for stewardship; 33. US corporate
governance, fiduciary success and stable economic growth; 34. Fulfilling
fiduciary duties in an imperfect world - governance recommendations from
the Stanford Institutional Investor Forum; 35. Addressing the participation
gap in institutional investment: an assessment framework and preliminary
results; 36. The costs of fiduciary failure - and an agenda for remedy;
Index.