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Perspectives on Corporate Governance
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Perspectives on Corporate Governance
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Offers a set of approaches from leading experts, covering the major areas of corporate governance reform and analyzing a range of issues and concerns.
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Offers a set of approaches from leading experts, covering the major areas of corporate governance reform and analyzing a range of issues and concerns.
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: 492
- Erscheinungstermin: 7. Oktober 2010
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 31mm
- Gewicht: 857g
- ISBN-13: 9780521458771
- ISBN-10: 0521458773
- Artikelnr.: 30206185
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Produktsicherheitsverantwortliche/r
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 492
- Erscheinungstermin: 7. Oktober 2010
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 31mm
- Gewicht: 857g
- ISBN-13: 9780521458771
- ISBN-10: 0521458773
- Artikelnr.: 30206185
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Produktsicherheitsverantwortliche/r
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Introduction F. Scott Kieff and Troy A. Paredes; Part I. The Board of
Directors and the CEO: 1. The trouble with boards Lawrence E. Mitchell; 2.
Rediscovering board expertise: legal implications of the empirical
literature Lawrence A. Cunningham; 3. The CEO and the board: on CEO
overconfidence and institutionalizing dissent in firms F. Scott Kieff and
Troy A. Paredes; Part II. The Why, When, How, and How Much of Executive
Pay: 4. Pay without performance: overview of the issues Lucian A. Bebchuk
and Jesse M. Fried; 5. Supersize pay, incentive compatibility, and the
volatile shareholder interest William W. Bratton; 6. 'Say on pay':
cautionary notes on the UK experience and the case for muddling through
Jeffrey N. Gordon; Part III. Constraining Managers and Directors:
Investors, Securities Regulation, and the Media: 7. Shareholder activism in
the Obama era Stephen M. Bainbridge; 8. After Dura: causation in
fraud-on-the-market actions Merritt B. Fox; 9. From boardroom to courtroom
to newsroom: the media and the corporate governance scandals Kathleen F.
Brickey; Part IV. Delaware Versus Congress: On the Federalization of
Corporate Governance: 10. How Delaware law can support better corporate
governance James D. Cox; 11. Federalism versus federalization: preserving
the division of responsibility in corporation law E. Norman Veasey, Shawn
Pompian and Christine Di Guglielmo; Part V. Comparative Corporate
Governance: 12. Regulatory differences in bank and capital market
regulation Hideki Kanda; 13. European corporate governance after five years
with Sarbanes-Oxley Rainer Kulms; Epilogue. Three secular trends of
corporate law Joel Seligman.
Directors and the CEO: 1. The trouble with boards Lawrence E. Mitchell; 2.
Rediscovering board expertise: legal implications of the empirical
literature Lawrence A. Cunningham; 3. The CEO and the board: on CEO
overconfidence and institutionalizing dissent in firms F. Scott Kieff and
Troy A. Paredes; Part II. The Why, When, How, and How Much of Executive
Pay: 4. Pay without performance: overview of the issues Lucian A. Bebchuk
and Jesse M. Fried; 5. Supersize pay, incentive compatibility, and the
volatile shareholder interest William W. Bratton; 6. 'Say on pay':
cautionary notes on the UK experience and the case for muddling through
Jeffrey N. Gordon; Part III. Constraining Managers and Directors:
Investors, Securities Regulation, and the Media: 7. Shareholder activism in
the Obama era Stephen M. Bainbridge; 8. After Dura: causation in
fraud-on-the-market actions Merritt B. Fox; 9. From boardroom to courtroom
to newsroom: the media and the corporate governance scandals Kathleen F.
Brickey; Part IV. Delaware Versus Congress: On the Federalization of
Corporate Governance: 10. How Delaware law can support better corporate
governance James D. Cox; 11. Federalism versus federalization: preserving
the division of responsibility in corporation law E. Norman Veasey, Shawn
Pompian and Christine Di Guglielmo; Part V. Comparative Corporate
Governance: 12. Regulatory differences in bank and capital market
regulation Hideki Kanda; 13. European corporate governance after five years
with Sarbanes-Oxley Rainer Kulms; Epilogue. Three secular trends of
corporate law Joel Seligman.
Introduction F. Scott Kieff and Troy A. Paredes; Part I. The Board of
Directors and the CEO: 1. The trouble with boards Lawrence E. Mitchell; 2.
Rediscovering board expertise: legal implications of the empirical
literature Lawrence A. Cunningham; 3. The CEO and the board: on CEO
overconfidence and institutionalizing dissent in firms F. Scott Kieff and
Troy A. Paredes; Part II. The Why, When, How, and How Much of Executive
Pay: 4. Pay without performance: overview of the issues Lucian A. Bebchuk
and Jesse M. Fried; 5. Supersize pay, incentive compatibility, and the
volatile shareholder interest William W. Bratton; 6. 'Say on pay':
cautionary notes on the UK experience and the case for muddling through
Jeffrey N. Gordon; Part III. Constraining Managers and Directors:
Investors, Securities Regulation, and the Media: 7. Shareholder activism in
the Obama era Stephen M. Bainbridge; 8. After Dura: causation in
fraud-on-the-market actions Merritt B. Fox; 9. From boardroom to courtroom
to newsroom: the media and the corporate governance scandals Kathleen F.
Brickey; Part IV. Delaware Versus Congress: On the Federalization of
Corporate Governance: 10. How Delaware law can support better corporate
governance James D. Cox; 11. Federalism versus federalization: preserving
the division of responsibility in corporation law E. Norman Veasey, Shawn
Pompian and Christine Di Guglielmo; Part V. Comparative Corporate
Governance: 12. Regulatory differences in bank and capital market
regulation Hideki Kanda; 13. European corporate governance after five years
with Sarbanes-Oxley Rainer Kulms; Epilogue. Three secular trends of
corporate law Joel Seligman.
Directors and the CEO: 1. The trouble with boards Lawrence E. Mitchell; 2.
Rediscovering board expertise: legal implications of the empirical
literature Lawrence A. Cunningham; 3. The CEO and the board: on CEO
overconfidence and institutionalizing dissent in firms F. Scott Kieff and
Troy A. Paredes; Part II. The Why, When, How, and How Much of Executive
Pay: 4. Pay without performance: overview of the issues Lucian A. Bebchuk
and Jesse M. Fried; 5. Supersize pay, incentive compatibility, and the
volatile shareholder interest William W. Bratton; 6. 'Say on pay':
cautionary notes on the UK experience and the case for muddling through
Jeffrey N. Gordon; Part III. Constraining Managers and Directors:
Investors, Securities Regulation, and the Media: 7. Shareholder activism in
the Obama era Stephen M. Bainbridge; 8. After Dura: causation in
fraud-on-the-market actions Merritt B. Fox; 9. From boardroom to courtroom
to newsroom: the media and the corporate governance scandals Kathleen F.
Brickey; Part IV. Delaware Versus Congress: On the Federalization of
Corporate Governance: 10. How Delaware law can support better corporate
governance James D. Cox; 11. Federalism versus federalization: preserving
the division of responsibility in corporation law E. Norman Veasey, Shawn
Pompian and Christine Di Guglielmo; Part V. Comparative Corporate
Governance: 12. Regulatory differences in bank and capital market
regulation Hideki Kanda; 13. European corporate governance after five years
with Sarbanes-Oxley Rainer Kulms; Epilogue. Three secular trends of
corporate law Joel Seligman.