This ambitious volume explores the politics of recent changes in
corporate governance regulation and the transnational forces
driving the process.
Corporate governance has in the 1990s become a catchphrase of
the global business community. The Enron collapse and other recent
corporate scandals, as well as growing worries in Europe about the
rise of Anglo-Saxon finance, have made issues of corporate
governance the subject of political controversies and of public
debate.
The contributors argue that the regulation of corporate
governance is an inherently political affair. Given the context of
the deepening globalization of the corporate world, it is also
increasingly a transnational phenomenon. In terms of the content of
regulation the book shows an increasing reliance on the application
of market mechanisms and a tendency for corporations themselves to
become commodities. The emerging new mode of regulation is
characterized by increasing informalization and by forms of private
regulation. These changes in content and mode are driven by
transnational actors, first of all the owners of internationally
mobile financial capital and their functionaries such as
coordination service firms, as well as by key public international
agencies such as the European Commission.
The Transnational Politics of Corporate Governance Regulation
will be of interest to students and researchers of international
political economy, politics, economics and corporate
governance.
General
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