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The Transformation of Wall Street is a comprehensive and insightful
historical analysis of the Securities andamp; Exchange Commission
from the perspective of a leader in securities regulation. The
Transformation of Wall Street offers an in-depth look at the
history of the SEC's origins, accomplishments, and failings since
its creation in 1934. Each chapter in the book takes historical
look at the tenure of the various SEC chairmen. The first edition,
published in 1977, covered the SEC through the Nixon-Ford
presidential administration. A revised edition was published in
1995, updating the book through 1992. Now, the third edition
continues the history until 2001, the end of Arthur Levitt's
Chairmanship, with a treatment of auditing issues through the
enactment of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act (July 2002). In this revised
edition, author Joel Seligman draws on unpublished SEC files and
extensive personal interviews to provide a comprehensive
examination of the origins, accomplishments, and failings of the
SEC and its leaders, from the creation of the SEC in 1934 to the
present. The new material, among other things, addresses: The
Private Securities Litigation Reform Act, which has had a
significant impact on private securities litigation after its
passage in 1995 The structure of the securities markets (which are
in an important transition because of Electronic Communications
Networks; decimalization; international competition; and the
continuing evolution to greater institutionalization of our markets
as well as the growth of several new products, most recently
security futures products) Municipal securities markets (which were
largely ignored before the recently resigned Arthur Levitt) Several
issues with respect to the accounting profession (most notably
auditor independence and the independence of accounting
standard-setting boards). In addition, this work focuses on
Chairman Levitt, whom the author believes was one of the most
accomplished of the post World War II chairs, and had the challenge
of being a Chair appointed by a Democratic party president during a
period when Republicans controlled both houses of Congress as well
as a period of extraordinary ferment in the securities market.
Five years in the preparation, Taming the Giant Corporation is the
culminating product of Ralph Nader s examination of governmental
and business irresponsibility. It explains in readable detail not
only how our megacorporations abuse their power, but also what we
our government, our citizens can do about it. Nader, Green, and
Seligman persuasively argue that we need to rethink and redesign
corporate law."
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