53 results on '"Jaap W. Winter"'
Search Results
2. The Commission’s 2018 Proposal on Cross-Border Mobility – An Assessment
- Author
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Markus Roth, Alain Pietrancosta, Susan Emmenegger, Klaus J. Hopt, Niamh Moloney, Paul Davies, Adam Opalski, Eddy Wymeersch, Guido Ferrarini, Martin Winner, Rolf Skog, Eilis Ferran, Jaap W. Winter, Corporate Law, Kooijmans Institute, and Law, Markets and Behavior
- Subjects
European level ,SDG 16 - Peace ,Creditor ,media_common.quotation_subject ,SDG 16 - Peace, Justice and Strong Institutions ,Economics, Econometrics and Finance (miscellaneous) ,Commission ,Public administration ,Directive ,Justice and Strong Institutions ,Negotiation ,Shareholder ,Political science ,media_common.cataloged_instance ,European commission ,European union ,Law and Political Science ,Law ,ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS ,media_common - Abstract
Currently, the Council of the European Union is negotiating the European Commission’s recent proposal on cross-border mobility. This paper provides an overall assessment based on the proposal’s central pillars: freedom of establishment and protection of the interests of creditors, shareholders, and employees. The proposed directive meets a real necessity for regulation on a European level and pursues an ambitious agenda. While the general approach is excellent, there is room for improvement on some issues of importance.
- Published
- 2019
3. Addressing the Crisis of the Modern Corporation: The Duty of Societal Responsibility of the Board
- Author
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Jaap W. Winter
- Subjects
Shareholder ,Shareholder primacy ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Corporate governance ,Corporate law ,Remuneration ,Moral responsibility ,Business ,Duty ,Corporation ,Law and economics ,media_common - Abstract
A core element of most analyses of how capitalism is failing us is the shareholder primacy doctrine that has taken hold of corporate law and corporate governance. The doctrine has been developed in theory (among others through the agency theory) and practice (e.g. executive remuneration and takeover bids) resulting in the corporation becoming amoral. Any moral responsibility for the effects of one’s behaviour on others has to come from the outside, as an externality. Within the corporation only responsibility to create value for shareholders exists. It is striking to see how this corporate reality created by ourselves seems to have become a reality that is over and beyond us, as a matter-of-fact that cannot be contested, it is simply how it is. Insights of Weber and Fromm show how we have succumbed to self-made formal rationalization and alienation so that we no longer have any responsibility for this corporate reality. This human failure can only be conquered by turning to who we are in the corporate context. Proposals have been made to change this corporate reality, by reducing shareholders’ rights, by installing a broader corporate purpose and by involving other stakeholders in the governance of the corporation. In each of these approaches the role of the board is crucial. Without a board, without the people who make up the board, who commit the corporation to being a responsible citizen in society, nothing much will change. In this paper I argue that in order to generate such a commitment corporate law should introduce a duty of societal responsibility of the board. This involves being responsible for the impact the corporation has on human, social and natural capital, besides financial capital. Corporate law and corporate governance arrangements should elaborate on this duty, by applying principles of fair decision-making and by transforming board decision-making, board composition, organizational governance, executive remuneration and transparency. Such elaborations anchored in the duty of societal responsibility will bring to life a veritable and human commitment from within the corporation to conduct itself as a responsible corporate citizen in society.
- Published
- 2020
4. Dehumanisation of the Large Corporation
- Author
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Jaap W. Winter
- Subjects
Theory of the firm ,Remuneration ,Production (economics) ,Balance sheet ,Business ,Capital market ,Dehumanization ,Shareholder value ,Corporation ,Law and economics - Abstract
The large corporation has become dehumanised, through a combination of developments like the one-sided shareholder value focus in the modern theory of the firm, capital markets that see companies as balance sheets, efficiency driven management practices that see humans as production tools, excessive regulation and control and failing remuneration sytems. Modern digital technologies, considering people only as bundles of data that can be exploited, increase dehumanisation. To re-humanise the corporation we need to reorient the purpose of the corporation, develop humane management practices, invent and improve corporate legal forms and first of all rediscover what it is to be human in our times.
- Published
- 2020
5. A Proposal for the Reform of Group Law in Europe
- Author
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Adam Opalski, Stanislaw Soltysinski, Guido Ferrarini, Martin Winner, Jaap W. Winter, Eddy Wymeersch, Klaus J. Hopt, Markus Roth, Eilis Ferran, Paul Davies, Peter Böckli, Alain Pietrancosta, Rolf Skog, and José M. Garrido Garcia
- Subjects
040101 forestry ,050502 law ,European Union law ,Solvency ,Creditor ,business.industry ,05 social sciences ,Subsidiary ,Accounting ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Shareholder ,Law ,Political Science and International Relations ,Economics ,Corporate law ,0401 agriculture, forestry, and fisheries ,media_common.cataloged_instance ,Parent company ,Business and International Management ,European union ,business ,0505 law ,media_common - Abstract
The legal regime applicable to groups of companies in the European Union has been discussed for many years. National legislations have been adopted in a certain number of Member States, and new initiatives are being considered by the European Commission and in academic writing. The central issues in groups of companies is the relationship between the controlling shareholder, often the parent company and the subsidiaries, and the potential for abuse to the detriment of the latter’s minority shareholders and creditors. Several answers have been formulated, ranging from a duty of the parent to indemnify the subsidiary for the charges imposed by the parent, to the acceptance of these charges provided they result in some benefit to the subsidiary and do not endanger the subsidiary’s solvency. In another approach, these issues may be solved by other common company law, e.g., on the basis of the unfair prejudice provisions. With respect to shareholder and creditor protection, a comparative analysis concludes that there is no need for additional regulatory safeguards. The present approaches indicate that group relations are often characterised by conflicts of interest. Therefore, it is proposed to develop a standard for dealing with these, especially under the form of related party transactions. The specific conditions for dealing with intragroup related party transactions are submitted for further discussion.
- Published
- 2017
6. The Human Experience of Being-in-the-Board: A Phenomenological Approach
- Author
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Jaap W. Winter
- Subjects
Corporate governance ,Reflective practice ,Engineering ethics ,Sociology ,Phenomenology (psychology) ,Strengths and weaknesses - Abstract
Corporate Governance research so far practically ignores the human experience of being-in-the-board as a source of understanding board practices, board performance and its strengths and weaknesses. This article takes a phenomenological approach to describe key, structural features of boards that inform members of the board on how to behave. Board members make sense of the complexity of these features in different ways, determined by their personal characters, drives, values, virtues, experiences and world views. Boards would benefit hugely from developing a reflective practice of uncovering, sharing and discussing their mutual experiences of being-in-the-board. Academically, becoming aware of the crucial role of human experience of being-in-the-board for the performance of the board should lead to very different types of research.
- Published
- 2018
7. The Commission’s 2018 Proposal on Cross-Border Mobility – An Assessment
- Author
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Guido Ferrarini, Markus Roth, Rolf Skog, Martin Winner, Eilis Ferran, Paul Davies, Niamh Moloney, Adam Opalski, Eddy Wymeersch, Jaap W. Winter, Alain Pietrancosta, Klaus J. Hopt, and Susan Emmenegger
- Subjects
European level ,Creditor ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Commission ,Public administration ,Directive ,Negotiation ,Shareholder ,Political science ,media_common.cataloged_instance ,European commission ,European union ,ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS ,media_common - Abstract
Currently, the Council of the European Union is negotiating the European Commission’s recent proposal on cross-border mobility. This paper provides an overall assessment based on the proposal’s central pillars: freedom of establishment and protection of the interests of creditors, shareholders, and employees. The proposed directive meets a real necessity for regulation on a European level and pursues an ambitious agenda. While the general approach is excellent, there is room for improvement on some issues of importance.
- Published
- 2018
8. When Others Pass Judgment. The Real Liability Risk for Directors
- Author
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Jaap W. Winter
- Subjects
Misconduct ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Corporate governance ,Liability ,Damages ,Cognitive dissonance ,Business ,Payment ,Enforcement ,Public opinion ,Law and economics ,media_common - Abstract
The personal liability of executive and non-executive directors receives perhaps surprisingly little attention in the international literature and research into the functioning of corporate governance. Although liability is a recognised enforcement mechanism for dealing with misconduct, no systematic research has as yet been conducted into the effects of personal liability (or the threat of it) on the conduct of executive and non-executive directors. The central point of this paper is that the core risk of liability for directors is that they are being judged by others (the court and public opinion) and will find that it becomes harder to maintain self-serving rationalisations for their behaviour that help them deal with their cognitive dissonance. This threat does not depend on actual out-of-pocket payments of damages. In fact, the ongoing formalisation and juridification of corporate and board conduct constantly increases the risk of making mistakes that trigger this threat. This may lead to boards being distracted from taking the best possible decision in order to take a decision that can be best justified in light of the rules and procedures that need to be complied with.
- Published
- 2017
9. The Consequences of Brexit for Companies and Company Law
- Author
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Eilis Ferran, Klaus J. Hopt, Adam Opalski, Guido Ferrarini, Alain Pietrancosta, José M. Garrido Garcia, Martin Winner, Stanislaw Soltysinski, Jaap W. Winter, Eddy Wymeersch, Paul Davies, Markus Roth, Peter Böckli, and Rolf Skog
- Subjects
Brexit ,Shareholder ,State (polity) ,Process (engineering) ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Corporate law ,European commission ,Accounting ,Audit ,Business ,Treaty ,media_common - Abstract
The consequences of the Brexit vote will be felt throughout the legal systems, both in the UK and in the EU. The legal consequences of the Brexit decision and the process which will lead to the withdrawal of the UK, raises numerous questions many of which are in the process of being analysed, and possibly solved. In the field of company law, with respect to cross-border matters, UK companies will be exposed to national laws in the EU States after the Treaty freedom of establishment will not further apply. This may lead to tensions between the two systems of recognition of foreign companies, i,e. the incorporation theory and the seat theory. Foreign companies active in seat jurisdictions may in the future be disqualified if their seat is effectively established in the seat State. Access may become more difficult, not on the basis of company law, but of sectoral regulations. In other part of the regulatory system, such as the rules on cross-border mergers, on rights of shareholders in listed companies, or disclosures to be made, equivalence of rules, as decided by the European Commission, will be the key factor. Additional issues will arise for the cross-border recognition of accounting standards and for the activity of auditors.
- Published
- 2017
10. A Proposal for Reforming Group Law in the European Union - Comparative Observations on the Way Forward
- Author
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Markus Roth, Eddy Wymeersch, Klaus J. Hopt, Eilis Ferran, Alain Pietrancosta, José M. Garrido Garcia, Peter Böckli, Jaap W. Winter, Rolf Skog, Paul Davies, Guido Ferrarini, Martin Winner, Adam Opalski, and Stanislaw Soltysinski
- Subjects
Solvency ,Creditor ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Subsidiary ,Accounting ,Shareholder ,Corporate law ,media_common.cataloged_instance ,Parent company ,Business ,European union ,Duty ,media_common - Abstract
The legal regime applicable to groups of companies in the European Union has been discussed for many years. National legislations have been adopted in a certain number of member states, and new initiatives are being considered by the European Commission and in academic writing. The central issues in groups of companies is the relationship between the controlling shareholder, often the parent company and the subsidiaries, and the potential for abuse to the detriment of the latter’s minority shareholders and creditors. Several answers have been formulated, going from a duty of the parent to indemnify the subsidiary for the charges imposed by the parent, to the acceptance of these charges provided they result in some benefit to the subsidiary and provided they do not endanger the subsidiary’s solvency. In a third approach, these issues may be solved by other common company law, e.g. on the basis of the unfair prejudice provisions. With respect to shareholder and creditor protection, a comparative analysis concludes that there is no need for additional regulatory safeguards. The present approaches indicate that group relations are often characterised by conflicts of interest. Therefore, it is proposed to develop a standard for dealing with these, especially under the form of Related Party Transactions. The specific conditions for dealing with intragroup related party transactions are submitted for further discussion.
- Published
- 2016
11. A Behavioral Perspective on Corporate Law and Corporate Governance
- Author
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Jaap W. Winter
- Subjects
Executive compensation ,Corporate group ,business.industry ,Corporate governance ,Corporate law ,Stakeholder ,Accounting ,Business ,Corporate Real Estate ,Corporate communication ,Corporate security - Abstract
This chapter examines corporate law and governance from a behavioral perspective. It begins with an overview of the growing body of behavioral knowledge and its impact on the core assumptions of the agency theory. It then goes on to consider a number of specific areas of corporate law and governance where behavioral perspectives are particularly relevant, with particular emphasis on rule making. The chapter also explores how the board of directors performs, along with modern executive compensation systems, often in the form of performance-based pay. Finally, the chapter turns to the interaction between executives, non-executives, and (institutional) investors in corporate governance.
- Published
- 2015
12. Shareholder Engagement and Identification
- Author
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Eilis Ferran, Alain Pietrancosta, José M. Garrido Garcia, Guido Ferrarini, Peter Böckli, Jaap W. Winter, Rolf Skog, Eddy Wymeersch, Paul Davies, Klaus J. Hopt, Stanislaw Soltysinski, and Markus Roth
- Subjects
Say on pay ,Shareholder resolution ,Shareholder ,business.industry ,Corporate governance ,Institutional investor ,Remuneration ,Accounting ,Business ,Commission ,Shareholder loan - Abstract
The European Commission launched, in April 2014, a new initiative to amend the shareholder rights directive as regards to the encouragement of long-term shareholder engagement. Under this heading, the Commission proposal intends to grant rights to shareholders concerning director remuneration (say on pay) and related party transactions. Moreover, it also imposes duties concerning an engagement policy on institutional investors and asset managers and gives rights to the management concerning shareholder identification. This paper deals with shareholder engagement and identification by referring to the initial Commission proposal. Both instruments are motivated by referring to the support shareholders have allegedly given to managers’ excessive risk taking before the financial crisis. The current level of “monitoring” of investee companies and engagement by institutional investors and asset managers is considered inadequate, leading to suboptimal governance of listed companies (see preamble 2). It is questionable whether the financial crisis revealed weak governance in listed companies and whether the rules proposed are likely to meet the objectives as stated in the directive.
- Published
- 2015
13. Netherlands
- Author
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Steven Hijink, Jaap W. Winter, Michael C. Schouten, and Jaron van Bekkum
- Subjects
Shareholder ,business.industry ,Administrative law ,Corporate governance ,Audit committee ,Civil law (legal system) ,Corporate law ,Stakeholder ,Accounting ,Business judgment rule ,business - Abstract
(General information:) The corporate governance system in the Netherlands has witnessed important changes over the last decade. Following a very public debate about the maintenance of the wide arsenal of defensive measures against takeovers in the first half of the 1990s, a first attempt was made to produce corporate governance recommendations for listed companies. The forty recommendations of the Peters Committee, published in 1997, triggered general awareness of corporate governance questions. The discussions on corporate governance were held against the background of the Dutch corporate law system that imposes a stakeholder rather than shareholder orientation of executive and supervisory boards of companies. The Dutch corporate law system includes distinct elements of employee codetermination: far-reaching works council powers and the Dutch structure regime for large companies, allowing employees to have a say in the appointment of supervisory directors. Dutch corporate law also, in general, allows a wide-ranging set of mechanisms that can be used not only to defend companies against hostile takeovers, but also to reduce substantially shareholders' involvement in corporate affairs under normal circumstances, including non-voting depositary receipts for shares, priority shares with special control rights, and structural delegation of authorities to the executive board.
- Published
- 2013
14. Making Corporate Governance Codes More Effective: A Response to the European Commission's Action Plan of December 2012
- Author
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José M. Garrido Garcia, Alain Pietrancosta, Peter Böckli, Guido Ferrarini, Eddy Wymeersch, Rolf Skog, Jaap W. Winter, Eilis Ferran, Markus Roth, Katharina Pistor, Klaus J. Hopt, Paul Davies, and Stanislaw Soltysinski
- Subjects
business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Corporate governance ,ComputingMilieux_LEGALASPECTSOFCOMPUTING ,Accounting ,Incentive ,Action plan ,Corporate law ,Sanctions ,Quality (business) ,Comply or explain ,Business ,Enforcement ,media_common - Abstract
This paper contains the European Company Law Experts' response to one of the main issues raised in the European Commission’s Action Plan of 12 December 2012, namely how to make corporate governance codes more effective. The concept of “codes’ effectiveness” has two meanings: effectiveness of the comply-explain mechanism (disclosure effectiveness) and level of adoption of the codes’ recommendations themselves (substantive effectiveness). The ECLE believes that it is of crucial importance to keep the advantages of regulation by codes while finding adequate improvements of the quality of the reports and the explanations. The relationship between the content of corporate governance codes and disclosure is discussed. A “culture of departure from code recommendations”, if well explained, is needed. The quality of corporate governance reports and the explanations should primarily be improved by incentives, but non-legal and legal sanctions may help. Improvements may also be possible by mobilizing private actors and/or by charging public or private agents and agencies with inspection and monitoring.
- Published
- 2013
15. Board on Task: Developing a Comprehensive Understanding of the Performance of Boards
- Author
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Erik van de Loo and Jaap W. Winter
- Subjects
Process management ,business.industry ,Corporate governance ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Principal–agent problem ,Public relations ,Task (project management) ,Conceptual framework ,Perception ,Financial crisis ,Business ,Element (criminal law) ,Function (engineering) ,media_common - Abstract
The corporate governance crisis at the start of this third Millennium and the financial crisis only a few years later, have cast doubts on the way boards of directors of companies function. Lawyers and (financial) economists have developed narrow perceptions of boards and their roles that are unable to explain board performance in reality and the factors that determine it. A comprehensive and integrated approach of boards is required to truly understand what drives board performance. Such an integrated approach necessarily includes behavioural aspects. In this paper we focus on a crucial element in the analysis of board performance: what it means for a board to be On Task. On the basis of an Organisational Role Analysis we describe the interaction between executives and non-executives that constitutes board activity. The concept of the Board On Task helps to understand and assess board performance in practice. It also offers a comprehensive conceptual framework for conducting novel research in understanding board performance. We conclude with some policy implications.
- Published
- 2012
16. The Future of European Company Law
- Author
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Eddy Wymeersch, Alain Pietrancosta, Eilis Ferran, Guido Ferrarini, Katharina Pistor, Paul Davies, Jaap W. Winter, Peter Böckli, Klaus J. Hopt, Rolf Skog, José Garrido, and Stanislaw Soltysinski
- Subjects
Public law ,Political science ,Law ,European integration ,Commercial law ,Single Euro Payments Area ,Parent company ,Joint-stock company ,Sources of law ,Limited company - Abstract
This paper contains the views of the European Company Law Experts (ECLE) on the future of European company law. The paper accompanies the responses of the European Company Law Experts to the European Commission’s Consultation on the future of European Company Law of spring 2012. In the first part of the paper we set out our views on the objectives of European company law and in the following parts we discuss how the European Commission should proceed with rule making in the field of company law.
- Published
- 2012
17. Shareholder Engagement and Stewardship: The Realities and Illusions of Institutional Share Ownership
- Author
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Jaap W. Winter
- Subjects
Finance ,Solvency ,Fiduciary ,Shareholder ,business.industry ,Green paper ,Corporate governance ,Institutional investor ,Remuneration ,Diversification (finance) ,Accounting ,Business - Abstract
Modern perceptions of good corporate governance assume that the general meeting has a meaningful role in the governance of listed companies and that shareholders make responsible use of their voting rights. Assessments after the financial crisis, however, indicate that institutional investors by and large are not engaged in any meaningful way. This paper analyses various factors that may lead institutional investors to be uninterested and unknowledgeable, including standard investment practices based on modern portfolio theory, diversification, prudency and solvency rules, intermediation through asset managers, fiduciary duties and portfolio manager remuneration. The paper distinguishes three types of engagement: Compliance, intervention and stewardship and argues that stewardship by institutional investors requires a radical rethinking and redesigning of institutional investment. Measures suggested by the European Commission in its Green Paper on Governance of Listed Companies may remove some obstacles and provide for some incentives but will not be enough to affect such transformation.
- Published
- 2011
18. European Company Law Experts' Response to the European Commission’s Green Paper 'The EU Corporate Governance Framework'
- Author
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Eddy Wymeersch, Rolf Skog, Jaap W. Winter, Paul Davies, Klaus J. Hopt, Stanislaw Soltysinski, Alain Pietrancosta, and Guido Ferrarini
- Subjects
Action (philosophy) ,Green paper ,Statement (logic) ,business.industry ,Corporate governance ,Corporate law ,Accounting ,Commission ,Business ,Comply or explain ,Law and economics ,Soft law - Abstract
This paper constitutes the European Company Law Experts' response to the European Commission's Green Paper "The EU Corporate Governance Framework". The paper contains responses to the individual questions put forward by the Commission as well as an introductory statement. In this statement we first set out briefly the rationale for having rules on corporate governance, whether those rules are determined at national or EU level and whether they are contained in hard or soft law. We then consider the rationale for taking action at EU level. Thirdly, we make a suggestion as to how the choice between hard and soft law should be made. Fourth, we consider the overall implications of the previous arguments for the division of rule-making between the EU and Member States.
- Published
- 2011
19. The Financial Crisis: Does Good Corporate Governance Matter and How to Achieve it?
- Author
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Jaap W. Winter
- Subjects
Shareholder ,business.industry ,As is ,Corporate governance ,Institutional investor ,Financial crisis ,Capital requirement ,Remuneration ,Accounting ,Directive ,business - Abstract
After the governance crisis of 2001-2003 and the regulatory response through the Sarbanes-Oxley Act and the European corporate governance codes, the financial crisis has revealed persistent governance problems in financial institutions relating to executives, non-executives and shareholders. For executives these problems lie in the areas of risk and remuneration. Non-executives may have been insufficiently involved in key decisions and underlying direction of the institutions, despite the strong push to increased monitoring by non-executives through Sarbanes-Oxley and European governance codes. Institutional investors have shown a general lack of engagement with investee companies. The paper continues to critically review the governance provisions for financial institutions set forth in the recent proposals for a European Capital Requirements Directive IV and related Regulation. It concludes that regulation often is not the best way to deal with the persistent governance problems, either because it cannot deal with the intricacies of corporate and human reality, as is the case of board and non-executive director performance, or because it will be ineffective as long as underlying generally held beliefs, world views, assumptions and paradigms remain unaffected, for example in the case of risk culture, remuneration and institutional investor lack of engagement. Regulation may actually worsen the situation in some cases, like remuneration and board performance. It takes courage not to regulate and seek alternative avenues to address such problems.
- Published
- 2011
20. Reciprocity in Takeovers
- Author
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Guido Ferrerini, Jaap W. Winter, Eddy Wymeersch, Klaus J. Hopt, and Marco Becht
- Subjects
Parliament ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Takeover Directive ,Institutional investor ,Accounting ,Directive ,Intervention (law) ,Empirical research ,Economics ,media_common.cataloged_instance ,European union ,business ,media_common ,Reciprocity (international relations) ,Law and economics - Abstract
The European Commission has proposed a Takeover Directive that aims to make the control of European corporations more contestable. The European Parliament and Germany will not adopt the Directive unless it provides for reciprocity in takeovers, limiting access to the articles of contestability to bidders that have adopted contestability themselves. Reciprocity in takeovers is not desirable. It unduly restricts the pool of bidders and reduces the potential benefits of contestable control. Contestable control itself has benefits, but the theoretical and empirical support for neutralising the power of incumbent blockholders and boards is too weak to justify large-scale regulatory intervention. The most powerful instruments for making corporate control contestable are not available in all Member States. The Takeover Directive could put these tools on the menu throughout the European Union, allowing companies that want them to embrace them - and giving institutional investors a chance to push for the hug. The current proposals will not change much, one-way or the other. If anything, they will add another level of complexity and confusion to the prevailing systems of corporate control in Europe.
- Published
- 2003
21. Report of the High Level Group of Company Law Experts on Issues Related to Takeover Bids in the European Union
- Author
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Klaus J. Hopt, José M. Garrido Garcia, Jaap W. Winter, Guido Rossi, Jonathan Rickford, Joelle Simon, and Jan Schans Christensen
- Subjects
Level playing field ,Finance ,business.industry ,Labour law ,Proportionality (law) ,Shareholder ,Corporate law ,Economics ,media_common.cataloged_instance ,Joint-stock company ,European union ,business ,media_common ,Share capital - Abstract
This document constitutes the High Level Group of Company Law Experts' first report, in conformity with the Group's terms of reference which were defined by the European Commission on 4 September 2001. The Group has been set up by the European Commission to provide independent advice in the first instance on issues related to pan-European rules for takeover bids and subsequently on key priorities for modernising company law in the European Union. The Group has been asked to consider the following three issues: - How to ensure the existence of a level playing field in the European Union concerning the equal treatment of shareholders across Member States; - The definition of the notion of an "equitable price" to be paid to minority shareholders; - The right for a majority shareholder to buy out minority shareholders ("squeeze-out right"). An important goal of the European Union is to create an integrated capital market in the Union by 2005. The regulation of takeover bids is a key element of such an integrated market. Currently there are many differences between the various Member States, in terms of such general and company specific factors. Annex [4] gives an overview of company specific barriers to takeover bids which are lawful or actually applied in the Member States and which the Group has reviewed.... This is what is generally referred to as the 'lack of level playing field' in the area of takeover bids in the European Union. In the light of available economic evidence the Group holds the view that the availability of a mechanism for takeover bids is basically beneficial. Takeovers are a means to create wealth by exploiting synergies and to discipline the management of listed companies with dispersed ownership, which in the long term is in the best interests of all stakeholders, and society at large. These views also form the basis for the Directive. This is not to say that takeover bids are always beneficial for all (or indeed any) of the parties involved. The mandate of the Group is to review whether and to what extent a level playing field for takeover bids should be created under company law in Member States. The Group acknowledges that any approach on this basis would leave the various general differences existing in Member States untouched. It believes, however, that its recommendations with respect to company law mechanisms and structures would, in addition to market driven changes, mark an important step forward in developing a general level playing field for takeover bids in the European Union. The Group believes that any European company law regulation aimed at creating a level playing field for takeover bids should be guided by two principles: 1. Shareholder decision-making In the event of a takeover bid the ultimate decision must be with the shareholders. They should always be able to decide whether to tender their shares to a bidder and for what price. It is not for the board of a company to decide whether a takeover bid for the shares in the company should be successful or not. This is not to say that the board has no responsibility at all in the context of a takeover bid. It is sometimes argued that allowing the board to frustrate a takeover bid can be justified as a means to help take into consideration the interests of shareholders and other stakeholders in the company, notably the employees. The Group rejects these views. Defensive mechanisms are often costly. Most importantly, managers are faced with a significant conflict of interests. Shareholders should be able to decide for themselves and stakeholders should be protected by specific rules (e.g. on labour law or environmental law). 2. Proportionality between risk-bearing capital and control In the Group's view, proportionality between ultimate economic risk and control means that share capital which has an unlimited right to participate in the profits of the company or in the residue on liquidation, and only such share capital, should normally carry control rights, in proportion to the risk carried. The holders of these rights to the residual profits and assets of the company are best equipped to decide on the affairs of the company as the ultimate effects of their decisions will be borne by them. This report will use the term 'risk-bearing capital' to refer to this concept. The holder of the majority of risk-bearing capital should be able to exercise control. Capital and control structures in a company which grant disproportionate control rights to some shareholder(s) should not operate to frustrate an otherwise successful bid for the risk-bearing capital of the company. The concept of risk-bearing capital used here does not include those preference shares which have no exposure to the surplus but only carry a limited right to distributions of profits and on liquidation.
- Published
- 2002
22. Cross-Border Voting in Europe
- Author
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Jaap W. Winter
- Subjects
Finance ,Conflict of laws ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,ComputingMilieux_LEGALASPECTSOFCOMPUTING ,Legislation ,Market economy ,Shareholder ,Stock exchange ,Voting ,Clearing ,Economics ,media_common.cataloged_instance ,European union ,business ,media_common ,Custodians - Abstract
This paper investigates the difficulties in the cross-border exercise of voting rights by shareholders. The difficulties arise a result of differences in the company laws, securities laws and securities systems in the member-states of the European Union, which have all been set up decades ago to serve national purposes. In addition there are as uncertainties in the rules of private international law governing these securities systems. These differences cause serious problems where shares are increasingly held through cross-border chains of intermediaries from investors to custodian and depository banks, national and international clearing organisations and regional or global custodians. As a result the author concludes that Europe is in need of a new legal and practical infrastructure which would facilitate cross-border voting by shareholders. The consolidating stock exchanges and clearing markets will increase the necessity of such an infrastructure, but will in itself not provide this infrastructure. Legislation, on a European scale is required. In devising a new system, Europe should look at the United States, where a number of these problems have been overcome in the past. With the knowledge of hindsight, Europe could probably even improve on the US system.
- Published
- 2001
23. Majority of the Minority Approval of Related Party Transactions: the Analysis of Institutional Shareholder Voting.
- Author
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Gözlügöl, Alperen Afşin
- Subjects
RELATED party transactions ,STOCKHOLDERS' voting ,PROXY ,VOTING - Abstract
Majority of the minority (MOM) approval of related party transactions (RPTs) has become a popular mechanism to be used in the oversight of RPTs among academics, stakeholders and regulators. Using this mechanism means that for companies, entering into RPTs are subject to the approval of a certain majority of the disinterested shareholders. This article examines the effectiveness of MOM approval as a mechanism to oversee RPTs, i. e. whether it would prevent value-decreasing RPTs while allowing value-increasing ones, by analysing institutional shareholder voting in this context within the US and European legal framework. Specifically, it examines whether institutional shareholders who dominate the shareholding across the world have sufficient incentives to cast informed votes in MOM votes on RPTs and the role of proxy advisors in this regard. Taking account of the relevant theoretical claims and empirical evidence, it provides further policy recommendations to improve the efficacy of MOM approval. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Institutional Investor Stewardship in the UK and Malaysia: Functionally Similar, Contextually Challenged.
- Author
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TAN, Petrina Tjin Yi
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. A Proposal for the Reform of Group Law in Europe.
- Author
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Böckli, Peter, Davies, Paul, Ferran, Eilís, Ferrarini, Guido, Garrido Garcia, José, Hopt, Klaus, Opalski, Adam, Pietrancosta, Alain, Roth, Markus, Skog, Rolf, Soltysinski, Stanislaw, Winter, Jaap, Winner, Martin, and Wymeersch, Eddy
- Subjects
CORPORATION law ,STOCKHOLDERS ,MOBILITY of law ,TRADE regulation ,ECONOMIC policy - Abstract
The legal regime applicable to groups of companies in the European Union has been discussed for many years. National legislations have been adopted in a certain number of Member States, and new initiatives are being considered by the European Commission and in academic writing. The central issues in groups of companies is the relationship between the controlling shareholder, often the parent company and the subsidiaries, and the potential for abuse to the detriment of the latter's minority shareholders and creditors. Several answers have been formulated, ranging from a duty of the parent to indemnify the subsidiary for the charges imposed by the parent, to the acceptance of these charges provided they result in some benefit to the subsidiary and do not endanger the subsidiary's solvency. In another approach, these issues may be solved by other common company law, e.g., on the basis of the unfair prejudice provisions. With respect to shareholder and creditor protection, a comparative analysis concludes that there is no need for additional regulatory safeguards. The present approaches indicate that group relations are often characterised by conflicts of interest. Therefore, it is proposed to develop a standard for dealing with these, especially under the form of related party transactions. The specific conditions for dealing with intragroup related party transactions are submitted for further discussion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Is the Independent Director Model Broken?
- Author
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Karmel, Roberta S.
- Subjects
OUTSIDE directors of corporations ,CORPORATE governance ,DODD-Frank Wall Street Reform & Consumer Protection Act ,MUTUAL funds - Abstract
The article focuses on the independent director model of the U.S Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). Topics discussed include the evolution of the independent director model as championed by the SEC, shareholder primacy and sets forth alternatives to the shareholder primacy theory of the firm and corporate governance models outside the U. S. Other topics include the Dodd–Frank reforms, Sarbanes–Oxley reforms and investment company governance.
- Published
- 2014
27. Table of contents.
- Subjects
STEWARDSHIP theory ,CORPORATE governance ,FINANCIAL markets ,STOCKHOLDERS ,INVESTORS - Abstract
The article focuses on the role of Great Britain's Stewardship Code which was implemented for development of corporate governance and financial market. It informs that the Code encourages the involvement of institutional shareholders with investee companies. The Code provides decision making method which reduces the risks of future financial and economic crises and increases understanding and communication levels between companies and investors.
- Published
- 2013
28. Report of the 4th CECL- Conference on Responsible Shareholdership.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Corporate Governance in Europa.
- Author
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TEICHMANN, CHRISTOPH
- Published
- 2001
30. Legal periodicals: a selection.
- Author
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SCHMIEMAN, EMILE
- Published
- 2005
31. La gouvernance en temps de pandemie: qu'a-t-on appris de la crise jusqu'a maintenant?
- Author
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Biron, Julie and Girard, Sebastien
- Subjects
Corporate directors -- Health policy -- Management ,Logistics -- Health aspects ,Company business management - Abstract
1 Les obligations et les devoirs généraux des administrateurs 1.1 L'obligation de loyauté ou l'obligation d'agir dans l'intérêt à long terme de la société 1.2 Le devoir de prudence et [...], La pandémie de COVID-19 a entraîné une crise économique importante qui a obligé les entreprises du monde entier à faire face à d'importantes pertes de revenus, ainsi qu'à des perturbation des chaînes d'approvisionnement en raison des fermetures et à des restrictions de mouvement. Dans ce contexte, les sociétés, les conseils d'administration et les dirigeants ont dû faire face à des situations inédites et avoir recours à de nouvelles stratégies pour relever des défis sans précédent : gel des liquidités, incapacité temporaire à exécuter des contrats, etc. Afin de mieux comprendre le rôle du conseil d'administration dans la gestion de la crise sanitaire liée à la pandémie et dans le but d'améliorer la résilience et l'efficience des sociétés devant d'éventuelles situations problématiques, les auteurs proposent une réflexion sur les devoirs et les obligations des administrateurs de même que sur les pratiques de gouvernance qui peuvent aider à surmonter ce type de situation. The COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in a major economic crisis that is confronting companies around the world with significant revenue losses as well as supply chain disruptions due to closures and movement restrictions. In this context, companies, boards and executives have had to face unprecedented situations and use new strategies to deal with unprecedented challenges : frozen liquidity, inability to execute contracts due to disruptions, etc. In order to better understand the board of directors' role in the management of the current crisis and to improve the resilience and efficiency of companies in the future, this article proposes a reflection on the duties and obligations of directors as well as on the governance practices that can help overcome such situations. La pandemia de la COVID 19 ha provocado una crisis economica importante, las empresas del mundo entero han debido asumir importantes pérdidas de ingresos, se han visto afectadas por perturbaciones en las cadenas de aprovisionamiento por los cierres y las restricciones de movimientos. En este contexto, las sociedades, las juntas directivas, y los dirigentes han tenido que afrontar situaciones inéditas y recurrir a nuevas estrategias para superar desafws sin precedentes : liquidez no disponible, incapacidad para ejecutar contratos por perturbaciones y otros motivos. Para comprender mejor el rol de la junta directiva en la gestion de la crisis en curso, y con el objetivo de mejorar la resiliencia y la eficacia de las sociedades ante futuras crisis, este texto ha planteado una reflexion sobre los deberes y las obligaciones de los ejecutivos así como de las prâcticas de gobernanza que pueden contribuir para poder superar este tipo de situaciones.
- Published
- 2022
32. Regulating EU Capital Markets Union : Volume I: Fundamentals of a European Code
- Author
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Rüdiger Veil and Rüdiger Veil
- Abstract
The current framework of EU regulation concerning capital markets is complex and partly inconsistent in the way that it is applied in the various Member States. Through the Capital Markets Union (CMU) project the European Union is pursuing the goal of establishing a true single market for capital in Europe. Regulating EU Capital Markets Union: Fundamentals of a European Code is the first of a two-volume series proposing the codification of EU legislature as a way to establish this goal. This book analyses all existing capital markets regulation. It explains the idea of codification, looks at the added value of a European Capital Markets Code, discusses key concepts of the current regimes and elaborates on the goals of the future codification act. The work explores the idea that the provisions spread over numerous rulebooks should be brought together in a single legal act in the form of a regulation and organized in a systematic way to reduce complexity thereby facilitating accessibility of capital markets law. Drawing on the experience of academics from various European countries, this volume discusses possible contents of a European Capital Markets Code, addresses approaches to regulatory reforms and explores the role of private enforcement.
- Published
- 2024
33. Instruments of EU Corporate Governance : Effecting Changes in the Management of Companies in a Changing World
- Author
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Hanne S. Birkmose, Mette Neville, Karsten Engsig Sørensen, Hanne S. Birkmose, Mette Neville, and Karsten Engsig Sørensen
- Subjects
- Corporate governance--European Union countries, Corporate governance--Law and legislation--European Union countries, Corporation law--European Union countries
- Abstract
European Company Law Series, Volume 19 Compelling new perspectives on corporate governance – including attention to increased shareholder engagement, long-term value creation, and sustainability – have given rise to major changes in the management of companies. Yet, until this book, there has been no systematic account of the legislative and soft law instruments designed to promote good corporate governance practices across the range of sizes and types of companies. The book analyses the various instruments that legislators and others have used to promote good corporate governance in European companies and assesses their value in practice. Nineteen well-known scholars of business and corporate law delve into how such issues and topics as the following are approached across the spectrum of corporate governance instruments available in Europe: corporate codes of conduct; procedural rules regulating how directors make decisions; rules on board composition and remuneration; regulating boards in small- and medium-sized enterprises; public enforcement of directors'duties; how digitalisation may affect implementation of corporate governance instruments; reporting rules; rules on the empowerment of minority shareholders; the role of the general meeting; regulation of the market for corporate control; certifications; rules on liability of directors; and role of auditors and accountants. In its in-depth analysis of the benefits and potential disadvantages of each instrument and what may be achieved both at company level and generally, this book will prove of value to all concerned with promoting responsible corporate governance, whether in business, government, or academia.
- Published
- 2023
34. Management by Missions : Connecting People to Strategy Through Purpose
- Author
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Pablo Cardona, Carlos Rey, Pablo Cardona, and Carlos Rey
- Subjects
- Mission statements, Management, Management by objectives
- Abstract
A few decades ago, management thinking started to embrace the idea of purpose. The first edition of this book marked an important step in this trajectory; it drew attention to the need for managers to relate the concepts of ‘purpose'and ‘missions'to strategy, culture and leadership. In the years since, purpose and missions have become business imperatives – not only in terms of remaining competitive but as core in the attempts to have a sustainable impact on the world.The second edition of Management by Missions is an open access book based on substantially more research carried out over fifteen years, involving more than 200 organizations around the world. All of this research supports that the practical models and ideas offered in the book have been tried and tested and actually work in practice.With case studies, anecdote and new research findings, the authors present the main tools of the MBM method (shared missions, missions scorecards, interdependency matrix,missions-based objectives and integral assessment) and the type of leadership needed to implement it. The ideas presented in this book mark a path towards a new management methodology for the XXI century and a new way of understanding the work that managers do.
- Published
- 2022
35. Foreign Takeover Bids in China and the Netherlands : A Comparative Study of Its Legislative Design
- Author
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Du Du and Du Du
- Abstract
Foreign takeovers have triggered increasing vigilance of host governments, as foreign ownership is likely to be deemed a potential threat to local employment, strategic assets, economic network, hightech competitiveness, and national security. Consequently, various countries have imposed different degrees of restriction on foreign investors.The disparity that lies in the national rules regarding foreign takeovers implies that while companies in some countries are well shielded against foreign buyers, the policy toolkits available to protect local companies are likely to remain empty in other countries. Hence, recent years have witnessed an escalating increase in calls for a more reciprocal environment for crossborder takeovers.Against this background, this book aims to investigate how national legislative designs react to the foreign takeoverrelated concerns in China and the Netherlands and accordingly propose several recommendations that may contribute to promoting a level playing field.As a timely refection upon the increasingly protectionist national markets, this book will be interesting and inspiring for practitioners, academics, and policymakers in China, the EU and even beyond.
- Published
- 2020
36. Corporate Citizen : New Perspectives on the Globalized Rule of Law
- Author
-
Oonagh E. Fitzgerald and Oonagh E. Fitzgerald
- Subjects
- Tort liability of corporations, Commercial law, International business enterprises--Law and legislation
- Abstract
The contributors to Corporate Citizen explore the legal frameworks and standards of conduct for multinational corporations. In a globalized world governed by domestic and international law, these corporations can be everywhere and nowhere at once, reaping financial benefits and enjoying the protections of investor-state arbitration but rarely being held accountable for the economic, environmental, and human rights harms they may have caused. Given the far-reaching power and success of the transnational corporation, and the many legal tools allowing these companies to avoid liability, how can governments protect their citizens? Broad-ranging in perspective, colourful and thought-provoking, the chapters in Corporate Citizen make the case that because the success of corporate global citizenship risks undermining national and international democratic governance, the multinational corporation must be more closely scrutinized and controlled – in the service of humanity and the protection of the natural environment.
- Published
- 2020
37. La gouvernance d’entreprise après la pandémie. Leçons pour l'avenir
- Author
-
Ivan Tchotourian and Ivan Tchotourian
- Subjects
- Epidemics--Economic aspects, Epidemics--Government policy, Corporate governance, COVID-19 (Disease)--Economic aspects, COVID-19 (Disease)--Government policy, Economic development
- Abstract
Crise sanitaire transformée en crise sociale, économique et financière, la pandémie de la COVID-19 engendre une réflexion sur l'entreprise et sa gouvernance. Au moment où le monde d'après émerge, un changement de trajectoire va-t-il s'amorcer? La question est posée. Cette crise montre que l'entreprise est une institution sociale qui doit assumer une responsabilité sociale. Le conseil d'administration, la direction, les actionnaires et les parties prenantes doivent donc repenser le cadre analytique de leurs relations et les raisons profondes qui les amènent à prendre des décisions. Au-delà de l'entreprise, c'est une perspective holistique qu'il faut avoir et l'on doit faire de la finance un instrument du changement. Penser l'après-coronavirus impose que le droit remette en cause des fondamentaux pour placer l'entreprise devant ses responsabilités. Faire du profit son unique finalité est une prémisse qui doit être abandonnée : le mieux-vivre ensemble de l'après-coronavirus est à ce prix. Cherchant à conserver une trace des nombreux écrits publiés durant la pandémie de coronavirus, cet ouvrage démontre que la COVID-19 ne constitue pas une révolution de la gouvernance. Elle remet au goût du jour des débats anciens, qui montrent aujourd'hui toute leur pertinence. La COVID-19 est susceptible de constituer une étape de l'évolution de la gouvernance d'entreprise, encore faut-il que le juriste joue pleinement son rôle dans cette étape.
- Published
- 2020
38. Research Handbook in Data Science and Law
- Author
-
Vanessa Mak, Eric Tjong Tjin Tai, Anna Berlee, Vanessa Mak, Eric Tjong Tjin Tai, and Anna Berlee
- Subjects
- Technology and law, Data mining, Information technology--Law and legislation, Electronic data processing, Data protection--Law and legislation
- Abstract
The generation and use of data in society has seen exponential growth in recent years. The emergent field of data science, concerned with understanding and analyzing this data, can be applied to applications spanning from healthcare and urban planning to smart household devices. The legal questions which accompany the rise of these technologies, however, remains underexplored. Breaking new ground this Research Handbook maps the legal implications of the emergence of data science.Drawing on comparative perspectives, this Research Handbook approaches the subject from different legal domains, considering the possibilities and limitations of the current legal framework. Reflecting on whether further regulation is needed to address the ethical and legal problems raised by data science, the contributors examine how the practice is, and should be, regulated and how it influences the law, judiciary, and legal research. The book makes a vital contribution to the emerging field of data science and law as a discipline, and covers data science methodologies and tools essential for both legal practice and scholarship.The Research Handbook in Data Science and Law will be an important resource for students interested in data and technology law, as well as for legal scholars and practitioners in the field. Data scientists seeking an introduction to the law surrounding the field will also find this Research Handbook invaluable.Contributors include: A. Berlee, C. Busch, A. Carlson, M.O. Cuevas, B. Custers, A. Daly, A. De Franceschi, W. Kaufmann, A. Klop, S. Kreifels, K.M. Kryla-Cudna, A.J.F. Lafarre, V. Mak, M. Mattioli, R. Nurullaev, R. Podszun, M.G. Porcedda, C. Prins, S. Ranchordas, R. Russo, K.K.E.C.T. Swinnen, P. Szulewski, E.T.T. Tai, H. U
- Published
- 2018
39. The Oxford Handbook of Corporate Law and Governance
- Author
-
Jeffrey N. Gordon, Wolf-Georg Ringe, Jeffrey N. Gordon, and Wolf-Georg Ringe
- Subjects
- Corporation law, Corporate governance, Common law, Corporate governance--Law and legislation
- Abstract
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.
- Published
- 2018
40. Legal management : Realiseren van juridische kwaliteit
- Author
-
Ivar Timmer, Arnt Mein, Ivar Timmer, and Arnt Mein
- Subjects
- Practice of law--Netherlands, Law offices--Netherlands
- Abstract
Legal management is een nieuw vakgebied, dat de praktijk van juridische professionals vanuit een organisatiekundig perspectief benadert. Binnen organisaties heeft legal management het doel de kwaliteit van de juridische functie te optimaliseren. In deze unieke uitgave schetsen experts de ontwikkeling van dit nieuwe vakgebied en gaan zij in op de stand van zaken van het legal management in verschillende sectoren van de Nederlandse rechtspraktijk: de centrale endecentrale overheid, het bedrijfsleven en de advocatuur.
- Published
- 2018
41. Executive Directors' Remuneration in Comparative Corporate Perspective
- Author
-
Christoph Van der Elst and Christoph Van der Elst
- Abstract
舖Attitude舗 looms large in any discussion of executive compensation. Yet here is a book that restricts its remit to what can actually be discovered about the corporate and contractual facts, figures, and rationales that determine how much a company director 舖earns舗 in an increasingly complex system of executive remuneration that seems to be taking root worldwide. In a remarkably insightful collection of articles, legal scholars from ten different countries address the state of the art of executive service contracts in twelve different jurisdictions, as diverse as (on the one hand) the European Union, its central Member States and the United States, and (on the other) Iceland and Romania. Their analysis penetrates beyond the often vague regulatory framework to actual survey figures, consultants舗 reports, and even data from a number of specific firms.
- Published
- 2015
42. Enhancing Firm Sustainability Through Governance : The Relational Corporate Governance Approach
- Author
-
Francesco de Zwart and Francesco de Zwart
- Subjects
- Corporate governance, Social responsibility of business
- Abstract
Enhancing Firm Sustainability Through Governance presents a fresh perspective on corporate governance and how the relationship between governance mechanisms, processes and variables should be understood through a new unifying theory: the relational corporate governance approach.Francesco de Zwart examines significant areas of governance study and practice to illustrate how the most established governance mechanisms, processes and variables affect each other and the governance and management structures within a company. The relational corporate governance approach acts as a tool for analyzing the governance health of individual companies and suggests the actions required to remedy sub-optimal governance and management arrangements. A wide selection of articles, empirical studies and literature have been translated into an original and understandable theory which complements and enhances the explanatory power of existing law and economics models of the firm.This interdisciplinary book will interest scholars and researchers in the fields of corporate law, economics, accounting, management and, more specifically, governance and regulation. Policymakers and practitioners involved in corporate governance will benefit from the discerning insight into managerial design and adoption, decision-making, monitoring and reporting structures and other processes within the corporation.
- Published
- 2015
43. Research Handbook on Shareholder Power
- Author
-
Jennifer G. Hill, Randall S. Thomas, Jennifer G. Hill, and Randall S. Thomas
- Subjects
- Stockholders, Corporations--Investor relations
- Abstract
The most pressing challenge in corporate governance today is figuring out how to modulate the power given to public investors. Too little is harmful, but so is too much. Finding the sweet spot is very tricky. This Research Handbook makes the quest a little easier. It collects in one place a set of thoughtful and provocative essays, authored by leading academic experts from around the world, on a range of topics related to corporate governance and the power of shareholders. Very highly recommended.'- Jesse Fried, Harvard Law School, US'The Research Handbook on Shareholder Power offers a state-of-the-art collection of original essays on the most profound development in corporate governance in recent decades: the growth of shareholder power as against managerial dominance. From the 1960s through at least the mid-1980s one would hear only cries bemoaning shareholder vulnerability. Managers were in control. Today it is at least as common to hear complaints by managers that they are being persecuted by activist shareholders. The reader of the Handbook will come away with an acute understanding of how and why this happened, and how all this reverberates in countries.'- Donald C. Langevoort, Georgetown University, US'Edward Elgar's Research Handbook on Shareholder Power is an excellent collection of essays by leading scholars in the fields of corporate law and corporate governance. Professors Hill and Thomas are to be commended for delivering this valuable and timely volume on a fascinating and crucial topic.'- Brian Cheffins, University of Cambridge, UKMuch of the history of corporate law has concerned itself not with shareholder power, but rather with its absence. Recent shifts in capital market structure require a reassessment of the role and power of shareholders. These original, specially commissioned contributions by leading scholars in corporate law and financial economics provide a contemporary analysis of shareholder power and consider the regulatory consequences of changing ownership patterns around the world.The book begins with chapters on shareholder activism by institutional investors, hedge funds, and controlling shareholders. Further chapters explore the relationship between shareholders and the board of directors, shareholder activism around mergers and acquisitions, and turf battles during shareholder litigation. The final section offers a number of international perspectives on shareholder power in Asia, Europe, and the Americas.Students and scholars of corporate law will value the Handbook's timely exploration of modern shareholder power as well as its fresh perspective and scope.Contributors: S. Bainbridge, M. Becht, M. Belcredi, M.M. Blair, J.C. Coates, J.D. Cox, P. Davies, P.H. Edelman, T. Eguchi, L. Enriques, G. Ferrarini, F. Ferri, M. Filippelli, J. Franks, G.S. Geis, R.J. Gilson, J.N. Gordon, E. Gorga, J. Grant, L. Guo, G. Heng, J.G. Hill, K.S. Kim, L.L. Lan, R.W. Masulis, C. Mayer, F. Partnoy, P.K.Pham, E. Pikulina, D. Puchniak, L. Renneboog, W.G. Ringe, Z. Shishido, M.M. Siems, R.S. Thomas, R.B. Thompson, U. Varottil, H. Wells, J. Zein
- Published
- 2015
44. The Independent Director : The Non-Executive Director’s Guide to Effective Board Presence
- Author
-
G. Brown and G. Brown
- Subjects
- Corporate governance, Directors of corporations
- Abstract
Non-executive directors play a very important role in modern business. Providing a rare emphasis on'soft skills', culture and relationship building, this comprehensive guide offers a unique insight into what it's actually like to be a non-executive director, backed up by global case studies, research and interviews.
- Published
- 2015
45. Indispensable and Other Myths : Why the CEO Pay Experiment Failed and How to Fix It
- Author
-
Michael Dorff and Michael Dorff
- Subjects
- Chief executive officers--Salaries, etc, Executives--Salaries, etc.--United States, Compensation management--United States
- Abstract
Prodded by economists in the 1970s, corporate directors began adding stock options and bonuses to the already-generous salaries of CEOs with hopes of boosting their companies'fortunes. Guided by largely unproven assumptions, this trend continues today. So what are companies getting in return for all the extra money? Not much, according to the empirical data.In Indispensable and Other Myths: Why the CEO Pay Experiment Failed and How to Fix It, Michael Dorff explores the consequences of this development. He shows how performance pay has not demonstrably improved corporate performance and offers studies showing that performance pay cannot improve performance on the kind of tasks companies ask of their CEOs. Moreover, CEOs of large established companies do not typically have much impact on their companies'results. In this eye-opening exposé, Dorff argues that companies should give up on the decades-long experiment to mold compensation into a corporate governance tool and maps out a rationale for returning to the era of guaranteed salaries.
- Published
- 2014
46. Boards of Directors in European Companies : Reshaping and Harmonising Their Organisation and Duties
- Author
-
Hanne S. Birkmose, Mette Neville, Hanne S. Birkmose, and Mette Neville
- Abstract
The recent financial crisis has once again stressed the importance of good corporate governance and corporate social responsibility in building trust in the European internal market. It has given rise to a discussion of whether a number of issues should be addressed through regulation or soft law at EU level. These issues relate in particular to the duties of directors in European companies as well as how the board of directors is composed and structured. Drawing attention first to duties of directors and then to the organisation of the board, this appropriately timed analysis takes stock of the status of the initiatives that have been debated so far, examines whether the rules which have been adopted form a coherent system, and suggests ways in which these initiatives affect national law. Topics covered include the following: directors'conflicts of interest; rules on shareholder transparency; duty to promote active ownership; whether it is possible to find a balance between corporate enterprise and risk control; integration of environmental and social concerns in the decision-making of the company; the board's role as a monitor of management; overcoming managerial deficiencies; the concept of independent directors; independence from a controlling shareholder; nomination of board members; disqualification of directors; and directors duties in groups of companies.
- Published
- 2013
47. Comparative Corporate Governance : A Functional and International Analysis
- Author
-
Andreas M. Fleckner, Klaus J. Hopt, Andreas M. Fleckner, and Klaus J. Hopt
- Subjects
- Corporate governance--Law and legislation
- Abstract
The business corporation is one of the greatest organizational inventions, but it creates risks both for shareholders and for third parties. To mitigate these risks, legislators, judges, and corporate lawyers have tried to learn from foreign experiences and adapt their regulatory regimes to them. In the last three decades, this approach has led to a stream of corporate and capital market law reforms unseen before. Corporate governance, the system by which companies are directed and controlled, is today a key topic for legislation, practice, and academia all over the world. Corporate scandals and financial crises have repeatedly highlighted the need to better understand the economic, social, political, and legal determinants of corporate governance in individual countries. Comparative Corporate Governance furthers this goal by bringing together current scholarship in law and economics with the expertise of local corporate governance specialists from twenty-three countries.
- Published
- 2013
48. La gouvernance d’entreprise après la pandémie. Leçons pour l'avenir
- Author
-
TCHOTOURIAN, IVAN and TCHOTOURIAN, IVAN
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Towards a Sustainable European Company Law : A Normative Analysis of the Objectives of EU Law, with the Takeover Directive As a Test Case
- Author
-
Beate Sjåfjell and Beate Sjåfjell
- Subjects
- Corporate governance--Law and legislation--Eur, Tender offers (Securities)--Law and legislation, Sustainable development--Law and legislation--, Corporation law--European Union countries, Securities--European Union countries, Social responsibility of business--European Unio
- Abstract
No one doubts any longer that sustainable development is a normative imperative. Yet there is unmistakably a great reluctance to acknowledge any legal basis upon which companies are obliged to forgo ‘shareholder value'when such a policy clearly dilutes responsibility for company action in the face of continuing environmental degradation. Here is a book that boldly says: ‘Shareholder primacy'is wrong. Such a narrow, short-term focus, the author shows, works against the achievement of the overarching societal goals of European law itself. The core role of EU company and securities law is to promote economic development, notably through the facilitation of market integration, while its contributory role is to further sustainable development through facilitation of the integration of economic and social development and environmental protection. There is a clear legal basis in European law to overturn the poorly substantiated theory of a ‘market for corporate control'as a theoretical and ideological basis when enacting company law. With rigorous and persuasive research and analysis, this book demonstrates that: European companies should have legal obligations beyond the maximization of profit for shareholders; human and environmental interests may and should be engaged with in the realm of company law; and company law has a crucial role in furthering sustainable development. As a test case, the author offers an in-depth analysis of the Takeover Directive, showing that it neither promotes economic development nor furthers the integration of the economic, social and environmental interests that the principle of sustainable development requires. This book goes to the very core of the ongoing debate on the function and future of European company law. Surprisingly, it does not make an argument in favour of changing EU law, but shows that we can take a great leap forward from where we are. For this powerful insight – and the innumerable recognitions that support it – this book is a timely and exciting new resource for lawyers and academics in ‘both camps': those on the activist side of the issue, and those with company or official policymaking responsibilities.
- Published
- 2009
50. Corporate Citizen : New Perspectives on the Globalized Rule of Law
- Author
-
Fitzgerald, Oonagh E., Edited by and Fitzgerald, Oonagh E.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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