This book sets out a new approach to identifying and resolving corporate law's normative concerns, establishing new methodology through detailed analysis of key changes in market practice. Paterson adopts a comparative UK/US approach in analysing the process of institutional change, providing important lessons for global legal harmonisation.
This book sets out a new approach to identifying and resolving corporate law's normative concerns, establishing new methodology through detailed analysis of key changes in market practice. Paterson adopts a comparative UK/US approach in analysing the process of institutional change, providing important lessons for global legal harmonisation.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Sarah Paterson is Associate Professor of Law at the LSE where she teaches and researches corporate insolvency and restructuring law. Before joining the LSE, Sarah was a partner in the Restructuring and Insolvency Group at Slaughter and May, with whom she retains a consultancy. She has written widely on insolvency and restructuring and is a co-author of Debt Restructuring 2e (OUP, 2016), and edits McKnight, Paterson and Zakrzewski on The Law of International Finance 2e (OUP, 2017).
Inhaltsangabe
1: Introduction 2: Emergence 3: The Rise of Leverage 4: The Rise of Trading 5: The Rise of Secured Credit 6: The Fall of the Lifetime Manager 7: The Fall of the Gentleman Banker 8: The Fall of the Honest Broker 9: Looking to the Future 10: The Approach in the Book and Implications for Reform
1: Introduction 2: Emergence 3: The Rise of Leverage 4: The Rise of Trading 5: The Rise of Secured Credit 6: The Fall of the Lifetime Manager 7: The Fall of the Gentleman Banker 8: The Fall of the Honest Broker 9: Looking to the Future 10: The Approach in the Book and Implications for Reform
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