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Corporate social responsibility is examined in this book as
multi-stakeholder approach to corporate governance. This volume
outlines neo-institutional and stakeholder theories of the firm,
new rational choice and social contract normative models, self
regulatory and soft law models, and the advances from behavioural
economics.
Corporations are the productive engine of market economies. Yet the
rules by which the wealth generated by corporations gets divided
between the providers of financial capital and the providers of
human capital are poorly understood. In this colloquium, a group of
economists, social scientists, lawyers, labor relations
specialists, business executives, and executives of financial
institutions debate questions about the allocation of risks,
returns, and rights in corporations that were raised in Margaret
Blair's prior book, Ownership and Control: Rethinking Corporate
Governance for the Twenty-First Century (Brookings, 1995). In
addition to Margaret Blair, participants include Bernard Aidinoff,
Amatai Etzioni, Ronald Gilson, Martin Ginsburg, Mark Goyder, Oliver
Hart, Bruce Householder, Tony Jackson, Bevis Longstreth, Jonathan
Low, Bruce MacLaury, Ira Millstein, Nell Minow, Charles Rossotti,
Charles Schultze, Kenneth West, and Sidney Winter. Roswell Perkins,
of the New York law firm of Debevoise & Plimpton, served as
moderator.
Intangibles are harder to measure, harder to quantify, often
more difficult to manage, evaluate, and account for than tangible
assets. There is no common language for sharing information about
intangible sources of value, and the language used tends to be
descriptive rather than quantitative and concrete. Unseen Wealth
stresses the importance of developing standards for identifying,
measuring, and accounting for intangible assets, and recommends
actions to government and business for improving the quality and
quantity of available information about intangible investments. The
book articulates a three-pronged set of reforms to help companies
construct better business and reporting models, improve the quality
of financial reporting, and clarify intellectual property right
laws. Unseen Wealth was developed by the Brookings Task Force on
Intangibles, which includes business leaders, consultants,
accounting professionals, economists, intellectual property
lawyers, and policy analysts.
U.S. companies are still reeling from the takeovers, leveraged
buyouts, junk bond issues, re-capitalizations, and other financial
restructuring transactions that reshaped corporations in the 1980s.
In this book, distinguished economists and scholars in the business
administration, management, and law discuss how those transactions
affected corporate management and the financial markets. The
authors examine why so much corporate restructuring occurred and,
particularly, what corporate governance problems were behind it.
They evaluate the causes and effects of restructuring, the
economic, political, and legal environment that encouraged it, and
the new laws and court rulings that resulted. The contributors
explain that financial restructuring was driven by a dispute over
who should control large public corporations, what their goals
should be, to whom the organizations and their managers should be
accountable, and how to make them more accountable. Although the
wave of financial restructuring itself has subsided, this conflict
remains unsolved and will continue to influence the business
climate. The Deal Decade addresses such issues as: Why did
long-dormant questions about corporate performance and governance
surface in the 1980s? Why did they manifest themselves in takeovers
and financial restructurings? Why would capital structure be likely
to affect corporate performance? Were the increased use of debt and
rapid pace of innovation in financial markets, and the explosion in
takeover activity independent phenomena or related? And if related,
which caused which? Finally, why did the impulse to restructure
subside without having resolved the controversies that underlay it?
Corporate social responsibility is examined in this book as
multi-stakeholder approach to corporate governance. This volume
outlines neo-institutional and stakeholder theories of the firm,
new rational choice and social contract normative models, self
regulatory and soft law models, and the advances from behavioural
economics.
DISPENSATION anthologizes the best Mormon short stories written
near the turn of the twenty-first century. Each of the
extraordinary twenty-eight stories in this volume represents a
potent individual voice, from popular and nationally acclaimed
authors Brady Udall and Orson Scott Card, to well-respected Mormon
literature veterans Douglas Thayer and Margaret Blair Young, to
talented up-and-coming writers Lisa Madsen Rubilar and Todd Robert
Petersen, and many more.
Book two of the Standing on the Promises trilogy. After this
groundbreaking, deeply moving trilogy on black LDS pioneers was
first published, modern-day descendants came forward with further
information, photographs, and more detailed history. In this new
edition, the authors have corrected some errors and dramatized the
experience of additional black pioneers.
Book three of the Standing on the Promises trilogy. After this
groundbreaking, deeply moving trilogy on black LDS pioneers was
first published, modern-day descendants came forward with further
information, photographs, and more detailed history. In this new
edition, the authors have corrected some errors and dramatized the
experience of additional black pioneers.
After this groundbreaking, deeply moving trilogy about black LDS
pioneers was first published, modern-day descendants came forward
with further information, photographs, and more detailed history.
In this new edition, the authors have corrected some errors and
dramatized the experience of additional black pioneers.
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