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Showing 1 - 4 of 4 matches in All Departments
This casebook is designed to introduce law students to transactional lawyering and to encourage stimulating student dialogues. At the same time it includes enough material from finance and economics literature to give students an understanding of how the market for corporate control operates. The casebook contains examples of documentation, as well as leading cases in each area. It is divided into four parts, including: (1) the source of gains in business combinations; (2) duties and risks of sellers; (3) buyers' risks in acquisitions; and (4) takeover contests.
This casebook is designed to introduce law students to the laws related to business combination transactions from a transactional perspective. It places heavy emphasis on different transactional structures (stock purchases, asset purchases, one-step mergers and two-step mergers) as well as issues that arise under business combination agreements, such as problems related to purchase price adjustments, earnouts, MAEs and terminations short of closing. The book includes samples of several kinds of business combination agreements. The book has also been updated to include recent cases, including important cases applying the Corwin doctrine.
This casebook provides a finance-oriented approach to corporate law, focusing on what students will need to know in corporate practice.Students learn: Financial fundamentals, such as balance sheets, income, and cash flow, as well as more complex topics, such as corporate debt and convertible securities Application of financial principles to analyze and understand case studies Contractual solutions employed to deal with the various conflicts and ambiguities that arise Additionally, the text covers a broad range of topics from pricing models to the poison pill and includes a table of cases. Student Supplemental Worksheets are available to download here.
The past several decades have witnessed a growing recognition that environmental concerns are essentially property rights issues. Despite agreement that an absence of well-defined and consistently enforced property rights results in the exploitation of air, water, and other natural resources, there is still widespread disagreement about many aspects of America's property rights paradigm. The prominent contributors to Who Owns the Environment? explore numerous theoretical and empirical possibilities for remedying these problems. An important book for environmental economists and those interested in environmental policy.
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