The Journal of Corporation Law

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COPYRIGHT GALE, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.

COPYRIGHT GALE, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved

from January 2007
Last Number: September 2022

University of Iowa Journal of Corporation Law
ISSN 0360-795X


Cantidad de documentos en esta fuente: 443

June 22, 2007

  • Disney, good faith, and structural bias.

  • United States v. Dentsply: the Third Circuit bites down on the 'alternative distribution channels' defense.

  • Bulletproof: mandatory rules for deal protection.

  • The corporate governance industry.

  • September 22, 2007

  • Toward common sense and common ground? Reflections on the shared interests of managers and labor in a more rational system of corporate governance.

  • Certification drag: the opinion puzzle and other transactional curiosities.

  • Competition in the mutual fund industry: evidence and implications for policy.

  • The investor compensation fund.

  • Show us your money: halting the use of trade organizations as covert conduits for corporate campaign contributions.

  • The shared interests of managers and labor in corporate governance: a comment on Strine.

  • Reflections on 'toward common sense and common ground?'.

  • Commentary on Leo Strine's "toward common sense and common ground? Reflections on the shared interests of managers and labor in a more rational system of corporate governance.".

  • Leo Strine's third way: responding to agency capitalism.

  • An older, balder critique of 'toward common sense and common ground?'.

  • The inconvenient truth about corporate governance: some thoughts on Vice-Chancellor Strine's essay.

  • Reflections on a visit to Leo Strine's Peaceable Kingdom.

  • Commentary on 'toward common sense and common ground? Reflections on the shared interests of managers and labor in a more rational system of corporate governance' by Leo E. Strine, Jr.

  • December 22, 2008

  • The new role for assurance services in global commerce.

  • The undercivilization of corporate law.

  • The Fetishization of independence.

  • To make or to buy: in-house lawyering and value creation.

  • January 01, 2008

  • Prisons for profit: do the social and political problems have a legal solution?

  • Direct or derivative: does it matter after Gentile v. Rossette?

  • March 22, 2008

  • From boardroom to courtroom to newsroom: the media and the corporate governance scandals.

  • No Seat at the Table: How Corporate Governance and Law Keep Women Out of the Boardroom.

  • Corporate ostracism: freezing out controlling shareholders.

  • Should mutual funds be corporations? A legal & econometric analysis.

  • Stock option "springloading": an examination of loaded justifications and new SEC disclosure rules.

  • State action immunity, municipalities, and the unique case of eminent domain.

  • June 22, 2008

  • Guests at the table? Independent directors in family-influenced public companies.

  • For whom the bell tolls: the demise of exchange trading floors and the growth of ECNs.

  • Free writing.

  • Layering administrative law and basic contract principles: analyzing the waiver of FMLA claims in severance agreements.

  • Defending the "acceptable business reason" requirement of the Equal Pay Act: a response to the challenges of Wernsing v. Department of Human Services.

  • September 22, 2008

  • Rating management behavior and ethics: a proposal to upgrade the corporate governance rating criteria.

  • Obedience as the foundation of fiduciary duty.

  • Shareholder primacy's corporatist origins: Adolf Berle and The Modern Corporation.

  • Class action criminality.

  • Ownership, limited: reconciling traditional and progressive corporate law via an Aristotelian understanding of ownership.

  • Regulation of foreign direct investment after the Dubai Ports controversy: has the U.S. government finally figured out how to balance foreign threats to national Security without alienating foreign companies?

  • Opening at $25 1/2 is big firm U.S.A.: why America may eventually have a publicly traded law firm, and why law firms can succeed without going public.

  • From Booker to Gall: the evolution of the reasonableness doctrine as applied to white-collar criminals and sentencing variances.

  • January 01, 2009

  • Bridging the gap between ownership and control.

  • Leveraged liquidity: bear raids and junk loans in the new credit market.

  • Assessing the materiality of financial misstatements.

  • In search of a remedy: do state laws exempting sellers from strict product liability adequately protect consumers harmed by defective Chinese-manufactured products?

  • The road less traveled: West Virginia's rejection of the learned intermediary doctrine in the age of direct-to-consumer advertising.

  • Do nonprofit hospitals provide community benefit? A critique of the standards for proving deservedness of federal tax exemptions.

  • March 22, 2009

  • The evolution of debt: covenants, the credit market, and corporate governance.

  • Can corporate monitorships improve corporate compliance?