Fiduciary Obligations in Business
Herausgeber: Laby, Arthur B.; Russell, Jacob Hale
Fiduciary Obligations in Business
Herausgeber: Laby, Arthur B.; Russell, Jacob Hale
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Academics, lawyers, and judges regularly grapple with difficult questions regarding fiduciary duties in business and how they differ across a range of firms. This volume assembles diverse but complementary perspectives from leading scholars on doctrinal, historical, and policy issues in fiduciary obligations and corporate governance.
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Academics, lawyers, and judges regularly grapple with difficult questions regarding fiduciary duties in business and how they differ across a range of firms. This volume assembles diverse but complementary perspectives from leading scholars on doctrinal, historical, and policy issues in fiduciary obligations and corporate governance.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 374
- Erscheinungstermin: 22. Juni 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 254mm x 178mm x 21mm
- Gewicht: 712g
- ISBN-13: 9781009387095
- ISBN-10: 100938709X
- Artikelnr.: 67636957
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 374
- Erscheinungstermin: 22. Juni 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 254mm x 178mm x 21mm
- Gewicht: 712g
- ISBN-13: 9781009387095
- ISBN-10: 100938709X
- Artikelnr.: 67636957
Part I. Identifying Fiduciaries and Their Duties: 1. Fiduciary duties on
the temporal edges of agency relationships Deborah A. DeMott; 2. Extra
large partnerships Christine Hurt; 3. The three fiduciaries of Delaware
corporate law¿and Eisenberg's error Lyman Johnson; 4. Trust, discretion,
and ERISA fiduciary status Arthur B. Laby; 5. Examining indenture trustee
duties Steven L. Schwarcz; Part II. Gaps and Alternatives in Fiduciary
Regimes: 6. Conflicts of interest in investment advice: an expanded view
Quinn Curtis; 7. A system of fiduciary protections for mutual funds Howell
E. Jackson; 8. Equitable duty: regulating corporate transactions in the
vicinity of insolvency from a comparative perspective Edward J. Janger; 9.
Equity, majoritarian governance, and the oppression remedy Paul B. Miller;
10. Fiduciary relationships in employee benefit plans Dana M. Muir; Part
III. Historical and Comparative Perspectives: 11. Delaware corporate law
and the 'end of history' in creditor protection Jared A. Ellias and Robert
J. Stark; 12. The independent director in Delaware and German corporate law
Christoph Kumpan; 13. For whom are non-profit managers trustees? The
contractual revolution in charity governance Jacob Hale Russell; 14.
Fiduciary law and Japanese nonprofits: a historical and comparative
synthesis Masayuki Tamaruya; Part IV. Stakeholders and Society: 15.
Corporations, directors' duties and the public/private divide Jennifer G.
Hill; 16. Stakeholder impartiality: a new classic approach for the
objectives of the corporation Amir N. Licht; 17. Shareholder primacy in
benefit corporations Julian Velasco; 18. Self-interested fiduciaries and
invulnerable beneficiaries: when fiduciary duties don't fit Kelli Alces
Williams; Index.
the temporal edges of agency relationships Deborah A. DeMott; 2. Extra
large partnerships Christine Hurt; 3. The three fiduciaries of Delaware
corporate law¿and Eisenberg's error Lyman Johnson; 4. Trust, discretion,
and ERISA fiduciary status Arthur B. Laby; 5. Examining indenture trustee
duties Steven L. Schwarcz; Part II. Gaps and Alternatives in Fiduciary
Regimes: 6. Conflicts of interest in investment advice: an expanded view
Quinn Curtis; 7. A system of fiduciary protections for mutual funds Howell
E. Jackson; 8. Equitable duty: regulating corporate transactions in the
vicinity of insolvency from a comparative perspective Edward J. Janger; 9.
Equity, majoritarian governance, and the oppression remedy Paul B. Miller;
10. Fiduciary relationships in employee benefit plans Dana M. Muir; Part
III. Historical and Comparative Perspectives: 11. Delaware corporate law
and the 'end of history' in creditor protection Jared A. Ellias and Robert
J. Stark; 12. The independent director in Delaware and German corporate law
Christoph Kumpan; 13. For whom are non-profit managers trustees? The
contractual revolution in charity governance Jacob Hale Russell; 14.
Fiduciary law and Japanese nonprofits: a historical and comparative
synthesis Masayuki Tamaruya; Part IV. Stakeholders and Society: 15.
Corporations, directors' duties and the public/private divide Jennifer G.
Hill; 16. Stakeholder impartiality: a new classic approach for the
objectives of the corporation Amir N. Licht; 17. Shareholder primacy in
benefit corporations Julian Velasco; 18. Self-interested fiduciaries and
invulnerable beneficiaries: when fiduciary duties don't fit Kelli Alces
Williams; Index.
Part I. Identifying Fiduciaries and Their Duties: 1. Fiduciary duties on
the temporal edges of agency relationships Deborah A. DeMott; 2. Extra
large partnerships Christine Hurt; 3. The three fiduciaries of Delaware
corporate law¿and Eisenberg's error Lyman Johnson; 4. Trust, discretion,
and ERISA fiduciary status Arthur B. Laby; 5. Examining indenture trustee
duties Steven L. Schwarcz; Part II. Gaps and Alternatives in Fiduciary
Regimes: 6. Conflicts of interest in investment advice: an expanded view
Quinn Curtis; 7. A system of fiduciary protections for mutual funds Howell
E. Jackson; 8. Equitable duty: regulating corporate transactions in the
vicinity of insolvency from a comparative perspective Edward J. Janger; 9.
Equity, majoritarian governance, and the oppression remedy Paul B. Miller;
10. Fiduciary relationships in employee benefit plans Dana M. Muir; Part
III. Historical and Comparative Perspectives: 11. Delaware corporate law
and the 'end of history' in creditor protection Jared A. Ellias and Robert
J. Stark; 12. The independent director in Delaware and German corporate law
Christoph Kumpan; 13. For whom are non-profit managers trustees? The
contractual revolution in charity governance Jacob Hale Russell; 14.
Fiduciary law and Japanese nonprofits: a historical and comparative
synthesis Masayuki Tamaruya; Part IV. Stakeholders and Society: 15.
Corporations, directors' duties and the public/private divide Jennifer G.
Hill; 16. Stakeholder impartiality: a new classic approach for the
objectives of the corporation Amir N. Licht; 17. Shareholder primacy in
benefit corporations Julian Velasco; 18. Self-interested fiduciaries and
invulnerable beneficiaries: when fiduciary duties don't fit Kelli Alces
Williams; Index.
the temporal edges of agency relationships Deborah A. DeMott; 2. Extra
large partnerships Christine Hurt; 3. The three fiduciaries of Delaware
corporate law¿and Eisenberg's error Lyman Johnson; 4. Trust, discretion,
and ERISA fiduciary status Arthur B. Laby; 5. Examining indenture trustee
duties Steven L. Schwarcz; Part II. Gaps and Alternatives in Fiduciary
Regimes: 6. Conflicts of interest in investment advice: an expanded view
Quinn Curtis; 7. A system of fiduciary protections for mutual funds Howell
E. Jackson; 8. Equitable duty: regulating corporate transactions in the
vicinity of insolvency from a comparative perspective Edward J. Janger; 9.
Equity, majoritarian governance, and the oppression remedy Paul B. Miller;
10. Fiduciary relationships in employee benefit plans Dana M. Muir; Part
III. Historical and Comparative Perspectives: 11. Delaware corporate law
and the 'end of history' in creditor protection Jared A. Ellias and Robert
J. Stark; 12. The independent director in Delaware and German corporate law
Christoph Kumpan; 13. For whom are non-profit managers trustees? The
contractual revolution in charity governance Jacob Hale Russell; 14.
Fiduciary law and Japanese nonprofits: a historical and comparative
synthesis Masayuki Tamaruya; Part IV. Stakeholders and Society: 15.
Corporations, directors' duties and the public/private divide Jennifer G.
Hill; 16. Stakeholder impartiality: a new classic approach for the
objectives of the corporation Amir N. Licht; 17. Shareholder primacy in
benefit corporations Julian Velasco; 18. Self-interested fiduciaries and
invulnerable beneficiaries: when fiduciary duties don't fit Kelli Alces
Williams; Index.