Product details
- Categories: Economic and Monetary Affairs
- Publisher: OUP - Oxford University Press
- ISBN: 9780198912576
- Publication Date: 03/10/2024
- Binding: Paperback
- Number of pages: 416
- Language: English
Summary
In recent years, the longstanding debate between shareholder-oriented
and stakeholder-oriented models of corporate governance for large
listed, or "public" corporations, has experienced a resurgence.
Simultaneously, a wave of new regulations has reshaped the legal
landscape, compelling businesses to integrate public objectives - such
as environmental protection or the social interests of specific
stakeholder groups - into their decision-making processes, which were
traditionally driven solely by profitability considerations. Against
this background, the book brings together economic, comparative,
historical, and doctrinal perspectives of scholars from US and European
legal academia.
The ongoing discourse regarding the fundamental
role of public corporations in economies and society is vivid and rather
different, across Europe, and the US. Filling a gap in comparative
literature on these themes, this volume further explores commonalities
across these varying legal landscapes, while remaining cognizant of
distinct, cultural, legal, and economic contexts. Most strikingly, the
contributions here point to the European emphasis on
stakeholder-oriented regulation, in contrast to the US-American focus on
shareholder value.
Providing a comprehensive analysis of recent
legal developments in this space, this volume serves as an essential
theoretical guide to debates around corporate purpose, CSR, and ESG
today.