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Recent case-law and legislation in European company and insolvency
law have significantly furthered the integration of European
business regulation. In particular, the case-law of the European
Court of Justice and the introduction of the EU Insolvency
Regulation have provided the stimulus for current reforms in
various jurisdictions in the fields of insolvency and financial
law. The UK, for instance, has adopted the Enterprise Act in 2002,
designed, inter alia, to enhance enterprise and to strengthen the
UK's approach to bankruptcy and corporate rescue. In a similar
vein, recent reform in France has modernized French insolvency law
and has even introduced a tool similar to the successful English
'company voluntary arrangement' (CVA). This book provides a
collection of studies by some of the leading English and French
experts today, analyzing current perspectives of insolvency and
financial law in Europe, both on the national level as well as on
the European level.
In numerous fields of law, ranging from family law to company law,
private actors increasingly set their own rules, revert to private
enforcement of those rules and choose the applicable law. Within
each field this tendency has already been scrutinised. Until now,
however, few attempts have been made to look at these phenomena
together with a view to arriving at conclusions that go beyond one
specific field. This book is a first attempt to fill this gap. It
is relevant for scholars and practitioners working in the
individual fields of law covered (private international law,
company law, family law, consumer law and commercial law) as well
as for scholars and policy makers trying to grasp the overall
nature of the increasing privatisation of the law.
Corporate law and corporate governance have been at the forefront
of regulatory activities across the world for several decades now,
and are subject to increasing public attention following the Global
Financial Crisis of 2008. The Oxford Handbook of Corporate Law and
Governance provides the global framework necessary to understand
the aims and methods of legal research in this field. Written by
leading scholars from around the world, the Handbook contains a
rich variety of chapters that provide a comparative and functional
overview of corporate governance. It opens with the central
theoretical approaches and methodologies in corporate law
scholarship in Part I, before examining core substantive topics in
corporate law, including shareholder rights, takeovers and
restructuring, and minority rights in Part II. Part III focuses on
new challenges in the field, including conflicts between Western
and Asian corporate governance environments, the rise of foreign
ownership, and emerging markets. Enforcement issues are covered in
Part IV, and Part V takes a broader approach, examining those areas
of law and finance that are interwoven with corporate governance,
including insolvency, taxation, and securities law as well as
financial regulation. The Handbook is a comprehensive,
interdisciplinary resource placing corporate law and governance in
its wider context, and is essential reading for scholars,
practitioners, and policymakers in the field.
This is the long-awaited third edition of this highly regarded
comparative overview of corporate law. This edition has been
comprehensively revised and updated to reflect the profound changes
in corporate law and governance practices that have taken place
since the previous edition. These include numerous regulatory
changes following the financial crisis of 2007-09 and the changing
landscape of governance, especially in the US, with the ever more
central role of institutional investors as (active) owners of
corporations. The geographic scope of the coverage has been
broadened to include an important emerging economy, Brazil. In
addition, the book now incorporates analysis of the burgeoning use
of corporate law to protect the interests of "external
constituencies" without any contractual relationship to a company,
in an attempt to tackle broader social and economic problems. The
authors start from the premise that corporations (or companies) in
all jurisdictions share the same key legal attributes: legal
personality, limited liability, delegated management, transferable
shares, and investor ownership. Businesses using the corporate form
give rise to three basic types of agency problems: those between
managers and shareholders as a class; controlling shareholders and
minority shareholders; and shareholders as a class and other
corporate constituencies, such as corporate creditors and
employees. After identifying the common set of legal strategies
used to address these agency problems and discussing their
interaction with enforcement institutions, The Anatomy of Corporate
Law illustrates how a number of core jurisdictions around the world
deploy such strategies. In so doing, the book highlights the many
commonalities across jurisdictions and reflects on the reasons why
they may differ on specific issues. The analysis covers the basic
governance structure of the corporation, including the powers of
the board of directors and the shareholder meeting, both when
management and when a dominant shareholder is in control. It then
analyses the role of corporate law in shaping labor relationships,
protection of external stakeholders, relationships with creditors,
related-party transactions, fundamental corporate actions such as
mergers and charter amendments, takeovers, and the regulation of
capital markets. The Anatomy of Corporate Law has established
itself as the leading book in the field of comparative corporate
law. Across the world, students and scholars at various stages in
their careers, from undergraduate law students to well-established
authorities in the field, routinely consult this book as a starting
point for their inquiries.
Corporate law and corporate governance have been at the forefront
of regulatory activities across the world for several decades now,
and are subject to increasing public attention following the Global
Financial Crisis of 2008. The Oxford Handbook of Corporate Law and
Governance provides the global framework necessary to understand
the aims and methods of legal research in this field. Written by
leading scholars from around the world, the Handbook contains a
rich variety of chapters that provide a comparative and functional
overview of corporate governance. It opens with the central
theoretical approaches and methodologies in corporate law
scholarship in Part I, before examining core substantive topics in
corporate law, including shareholder rights, takeovers and
restructuring, and minority rights in Part II. Part III focuses on
new challenges in the field, including conflicts between Western
and Asian corporate governance environments, the rise of foreign
ownership, and emerging markets. Enforcement issues are covered in
Part IV, and Part V takes a broader approach, examining those areas
of law and finances that are interwoven with corporate governance,
including insolvency, taxation, and securities law as well as
financial regulation. Now in paperback, the Handbook is a
comprehensive, interdisciplinary resource placing corporate law and
governance in its wider context, and is essential reading for
scholars, practitioners, and policymakers in the field.
New investment techniques and new types of shareholder activists
are shaking up the traditional ways of equity investment that
informs much of our present-day corporate law and governance. Savvy
investors such as hedge funds are using financial derivatives,
securities lending transactions, and related concepts to decouple
the financial risk from shares. This leads to a distortion of
incentives and has potentially severe consequences for the
functioning of corporate governance and of capital markets overall.
Taking stock of the different decoupling strategies that have
become known over the past several years, this book then provides
an evaluation of each from a legal and an economic perspective.
Based on several analytical frameworks, the author identifies the
elements of equity deconstruction and demonstrates the consequences
for shareholders, outside investors, and capital markets. On this
basis, the book makes the case for regulatory intervention, based
on three different pillars and comprising disclosure, voting right
suspension, and ex-post litigation. The book concludes by
developing a concrete, comprehensive proposal on how to address the
regulatory problem. Overall, this book contributes to the debate
about activist investment and the role of shareholders in corporate
governance. At the same time it raises a number of important
considerations about the role of equity investment more generally.
This is the long-awaited third edition of this highly regarded
comparative overview of corporate law. This edition has been
comprehensively revised and updated to reflect the profound changes
in corporate law and governance practices that have taken place
since the previous edition. These include numerous regulatory
changes following the financial crisis of 2007-09 and the changing
landscape of governance, especially in the US, with the ever more
central role of institutional investors as (active) owners of
corporations. The geographic scope of the coverage has been
broadened to include an important emerging economy, Brazil. In
addition, the book now incorporates analysis of the burgeoning use
of corporate law to protect the interests of "external
constituencies" without any contractual relationship to a company,
in an attempt to tackle broader social and economic problems. The
authors start from the premise that corporations (or companies) in
all jurisdictions share the same key legal attributes: legal
personality, limited liability, delegated management, transferable
shares, and investor ownership. Businesses using the corporate form
give rise to three basic types of agency problems: those between
managers and shareholders as a class; controlling shareholders and
minority shareholders; and shareholders as a class and other
corporate constituencies, such as corporate creditors and
employees. After identifying the common set of legal strategies
used to address these agency problems and discussing their
interaction with enforcement institutions, The Anatomy of Corporate
Law illustrates how a number of core jurisdictions around the world
deploy such strategies. In so doing, the book highlights the many
commonalities across jurisdictions and reflects on the reasons why
they may differ on specific issues. The analysis covers the basic
governance structure of the corporation, including the powers of
the board of directors and the shareholder meeting, both when
management and when a dominant shareholder is in control. It then
analyses the role of corporate law in shaping labor relationships,
protection of external stakeholders, relationships with creditors,
related-party transactions, fundamental corporate actions such as
mergers and charter amendments, takeovers, and the regulation of
capital markets. The Anatomy of Corporate Law has established
itself as the leading book in the field of comparative corporate
law. Across the world, students and scholars at various stages in
their careers, from undergraduate law students to well-established
authorities in the field, routinely consult this book as a starting
point for their inquiries.
The financial crisis has brought about a revival of state
protectionism across the globe. Most Western leaders have made a
virtue of big government and state intervention; bail-outs and
Sovereign Wealth Funds have been among the first responses to the
economic contraction. Company law rules are one of the instruments
frequently used to restrict or to discourage integration or to
deter foreign investment. Examples for the new protectionism can be
seen in a wide range of legislative and regulatory measures, for
instance state measures preventing foreign takeovers, 'golden
shares' or laws on foreign direct investment targeting Sovereign
Wealth Funds, mainly from Asia.
This book presents timely research by a number of company law and
EU law experts into this field of law. The chapters cover a broad
range of topics, spanning from takeovers/mergers over the one
share-one vote debate through to the foreclosure of markets against
Sovereign Wealth Funds.
Investor-led Sustainability in Corporate Governance argues that ESG
engagement can be a very powerful driver towards a more
sustainability-oriented future in corporate governance.
Investor-led sustainability has many advantages compared to a more
prescriptive, regulatory approach. For example, a greater focus on
investor initiatives would follow a more flexible and dynamic
pattern rather than complying with pre-defined criteria that are
slow to change. Moreover, investor-promoted assessments are not
likely to impair welfare creation in the same way as ill-defined
legal standards; they would also not trigger regulatory arbitrage
and would avoid deadlock situations in corporate decision-making.
Any regulatory responses should then be limited to a facilitative
and supportive role. This monograph proceeds as follows: Section 2
traces the recent trend towards increased ESG and sustainability in
corporate governance and finance, and in particular documents the
rise of investor-led initiatives in this field. Section 3 discusses
the merits of such shareholder engagement and makes the case that
ESG initiatives pursued by investors are consistent with business
realities and conform with market logic of both demand and supply.
Section 4 turns to the main advantage of ESG engagement, namely
that it increasingly relies on coalitions and team-building between
different types of institutional investors. It is presented that
these teaming-up strategies have a dual benefit and a double genius
in that they give greater support to campaigns, but also serve as
an in-built screening mechanism that would exclude the realization
of idiosyncratic benefits for individual investors. Sections 5 and
6 develop some regulatory implications and conclude the analysis.
Climate change is widely recognised as one of society's most
profound challenges. In facing that challenge, the role of
businesses is central. Corporations have a crucial role to play in
mitigating climate change by reducing their net emissions and by
driving the innovation and adaptation that are necessary to bring
about a net zero economy. This volume brings together leading
thinkers to evaluate the contribution that business law has made,
and could make, to help drive such change. The contributions are
organized under 4 broad themes: * Climate Change Disclosures and
Net Zero Commitments * Climate Change: Exit or Voice * Climate
Change in the Boardroom * Climate Change in the Courtroom
The global financial and economic crisis which started in 2008 has
had devastating effects around the globe. It has caused a
rethinking in different areas of law, and posed new challenges to
regulators and private actors alike. One of the emerging issues is
the apparent eclipse of boundaries between different legal
disciplines: financial and corporate lawyers have to learn how
public law instruments can complement their traditional governance
tools; conversely, public lawyers have had to come to understand
the specificities of the financial markets they intend to regulate.
While commentary on financial regulation and the global financial
crisis abounds, it tends to remain within disciplinary boundaries.
This volume not only brings together scholarship from different
areas of law (constitutional and administrative law, EU law,
financial law and regulation), but also from a variety of
backgrounds (the academy, practice, policy-making) and a number of
different jurisdictions. The volume illustrates how
interdisciplinary scholarship belongs at the centre of any
discussion of the economic crisis, and indeed regulation theory
more generally. This is a timely exploration of cutting-edge issues
of financial regulation.
The global financial and economic crisis which started in 2008 has
had devastating effects around the globe. It has caused a
rethinking in different areas of law, and posed new challenges to
regulators and private actors alike. One of the emerging issues is
the apparent eclipse of boundaries between different legal
disciplines: financial and corporate lawyers have to learn how
public law instruments can complement their traditional governance
tools; conversely, public lawyers have had to come to understand
the specificities of the financial markets they intend to regulate.
While commentary on financial regulation and the global financial
crisis abounds, it tends to remain within disciplinary boundaries.
This volume not only brings together scholarship from different
areas of law (constitutional and administrative law, EU law,
financial law and regulation), but also from a variety of
backgrounds (academia, practice, policy-making) and a number of
different jurisdictions.The volume illustrates how
interdisciplinary scholarship belongs at the centre of any
discussion of the economic crisis, and indeed regulation theory
more generally. This is a timely exploration of cutting-edge issues
of financial regulation. '...a very welcome addition to the limited
European legal literature on the global financial crisis...it
constitutes an important contribution in the field and it is
certainly to be applauded for paving the way for further
cross-disciplinary discussion amongst lawyers'. Mihalis Dekastros,
European Journal of Legal Studies, 2014, Vol 7 '...Ringe and
Huber's book provides important, if not indispensable elements for
a coherent theory and doctrine of the law within the financial
crisis'. Matthias Ruffert, Common Market Law, 2015, Vol 52 (1)
'[T]his book is interesting for anyone working in a dynamic area of
law. Academics will want to go through it in its entirety...'
Dimitrios Kyriazis, Law Quarterly Review, 2015, Vol 131
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