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9780198252887

Corporate Power and Responsibility Issues in the Theory of Company Law

by
  • ISBN13:

    9780198252887

  • ISBN10:

    0198252889

  • Format: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 1994-02-17
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press
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Summary

In this important new study John Parkinson rejects the theory that the "internal affairs" of corporate organizations should be insulated from regulatory intervention and argues that a function of company law is to promote the public interest. He examines a number of topical and controversial issues from this perspective including the separation of ownership and control, corporate governance, and the role of markets in controlling management behavior. The book also explores the protection of interests largely ignored by company law such as those of employees and the local community and suggests new areas for reform.

Author Biography

John Parkinson is a lecturer in law at Bristol University where he teaches company law and contract.

Table of Contents

Table of UK Cases
Table of Commonwealth Cases
Table of US Cases
Table of UK Statutes
Table of European Community Legislation
Table of UK Statutory Instruments
Table of Legislation from other Jurisdictions
Introductionp. 1
Corporate Powerp. 3
The Corporate Economyp. 3
The Nature of Corporate Powerp. 8
Corporate Power and the Need for a Public-Interest Justificationp. 21
Companies and the Creation of Social Wealthp. 41
Ownership, Control, and the Pursuit of Profitp. 51
Delegation and the Problem of Controlp. 51
The Separation of Ownership and Controlp. 54
The Legal Control of Management Discretionp. 73
The Content of the Duty to Act bona fide for the Benefit of the Companyp. 74
The Effectiveness of the Duty to Act bona fide for the Benefit of the Companyp. 92
Managerial Efficiencyp. 97
Directors and the Duty of Carep. 97
The Discipline of the Marketp. 113
The Role of Liability Rulesp. 132
Reinforcing - And Challenging - The Legal Modelp. 137
Protecting the Governance Structurep. 137
Protecting the Shareholders' Financial Interestsp. 140
Challenging the Legal Model: the Redefinition of Management Dutiesp. 151
Corporate Governance: Shareholder Democracy and the Monitoring Boardp. 159
Control through Shareholder Democracyp. 160
Institutional Controlp. 166
The Nexus of Contracts Model of the Companyp. 177
Board Reformp. 191
Management Self-Dealingp. 200
Self-Interested Transactionsp. 205
Directors' Terms of Employment and Remunerationp. 218
Corporate Opportunitiesp. 226
Conclusionp. 236
The Enforcement of Directors' Dutiesp. 237
Enforcement by the Companyp. 237
Enforcement by Minority Shareholdersp. 241
Social Responsibility Within the Current Legal Fabricp. 260
Social Responsibility and the Modern Public Companyp. 262
A Typology of Corporate Social Responsibilityp. 266
The Scope for Social Policy within the Legal Modelp. 271
Social Responsibility in Practicep. 281
An Evaluation of Profit-Sacrificing Social Responsibilityp. 304
The Three Criticismsp. 305
The Adoption of Other-Regarding Constraintsp. 309
Social Activismp. 337
Conclusion: Social Responsibility as a Process Conceptp. 344
Strengthening the Constraintsp. 347
Enforcing External Constraintsp. 349
Increasing Corporate Responsibility: Two Modelsp. 364
Implementing the Modelsp. 366
The Democratic Imperative: Beyond Social Responsibilityp. 397
The Case for Employee Participationp. 402
Board-Level Participationp. 408
Employee Share Ownershipp. 423
Worker-Controlled Enterprisesp. 426
Bibliographyp. 435
Indexp. 459
Table of Contents provided by Blackwell. All Rights Reserved.

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