(Pix © Larry Catá Backer; Tauluseinä Tavelväggen, Wall of Printings (1977); Nörrköping Art Museum Turku Finland))
Every year for almost 25 years, the Corporate Practice Commentator (with great thanks to Robert Thompson (Georgetown)) announces the
results of its annual poll to select the ten best
corporate and securities articles. Faculty in corporate and securities
law are usually asked to select about six choices for best corporate and securities articles
from a list of articles published and indexed in legal journals during
2018. This year about 395 articles were listed.
There is justifiably much attention paid to those ten or so articles that garnered the most notice from this academic community each year especially in social media outlets of importance to the academy (e.g., here).
At the same time, it seems to me that the greatest service of these sorts of exercises is the gathering together of the group of writings that even merit consideration for "best" among their peers. The field of corporate and securities law has grown with the expansion of economic activity beyond the state, as well as with the explosion of self regulatory mechanisms at the local and international level, all of which have transformed notions of legal risk (which consequentially becomes more interesting for the legal academic).
It is with that in mind and in hopes of sparking greater readership among the many excellent but perhaps overlooked contributions to knowledge in this again dynamic field, I include below the list of the 2018 choices from among which the "best" will be drawn (word searchable). The list may also be accessed HERE (pdf and also word searchable). My hope is that interested readers will find it easier to explore these contributions that might over wise have missed within the increasingly broad field. The pool of candidates for prior years may also be accessed on line HERE.
Business Associations and Securities Articles Indexed during 2018
January 19, 2018
1.
Elaine Waterhouse Wilson. Cooperatives: the first social
enterprise. 66 DePaul L. Rev. 1013-1079
(2017).
2.
Alicia E. Plerhoples. Nonprofit displacement and the pursuit of
charity through public benefit corporations.
21 Lewis & Clark L. Rev. 525-571 (2017).
3.
John C. Coffee Jr. The globalization of entrepreneurial
litigation: law, culture, and incentives.
165 U. Pa. L. Rev. 1895-1925 (2017).
4.
Emiliano Giudici & Justin Blount. Evaluating market reactions to non-practicing
entity litigation. 20 Vand. J. Ent.
& Tech. L. 51-86 (2017).
5.
Brian Knight. Federalism and federalization on
the fintech frontier. 20 Vand. J. Ent.
& Tech. L. 129-206 (2017).
January
26, 2018
6.
Murillo Campello, Daniel Ferrés & Gaizka
Ormazabal. Whistle-blowers on the board?
The role of independent directors in cartel prosecutions. 60 J.L. & Econ. 241-268 (2017).
7.
Diane Del Guercio, Elizabeth R. Odders-White
& Mark J. Ready. The deterrent
effect of the Securities and Exchange Commission’s enforcement intensity on
illegal insider trading: evidence from run-up before news events. 60 J.L. & Econ. 269-307 (2017).
February
2, 2018
8.
Charles Yablon.
Byte marks: making sense of new F.R.C.P. 37(e). 69 Fla. L. Rev. 571-597 (2017).
9.
Stephen J. Choi, Jessica Erickson & A.C.
Pritchard. Piling on? An empirical study
of parallel derivative suits. 14 J.
Empirical Legal Stud. 652-682 (2017).
10. Samuel
F. Ernst. Pluralism applied: a
concordant approach to selecting contract rules. 101 Marq. L. Rev. 87-129 (2017).
11. Julie
E. Cohen. Law for the platform economy. 51 UC Davis L. Rev. 133-204 (2017).
12. Kenneth
R. Davis. The equality principle: how
Title VII can save insider trading law.
39 Cardozo L. Rev. 199-243 (2017).
13. Michael
D. Guttentag. Selective disclosure and
insider trading. 69 Fla. L. Rev. 519-569
(2017).
February
9, 2018
14. Jonathan
Macey & David Swensen. Recovering
the promise of the orderly and fair stock exchange. 42 J. Corp. L. 777-791 (2017).
15. Juana
Paola Bustamante I., Kevin J. Fandl.
Incentivizing gray market entrepreneurs in emerging markets. 37 Nw. J. Int’l L. & Bus. 415-456 (2017).
16. Zehra
G. Kavame Eroglu. The political economy
of international standard setting in financial reporting: how the United States
led the adoption of IFRS across the world.
37 Nw. J. Int’l L. & Bus. 457-512 (2017).
17. Brandon
L. Garrett. Book reviews. The boom and
bust of American imprisonment. Why They Do It: Inside the Mind of the
White-Collar Criminal by Eugene Soltes; Capital Offenses: Business Crime and
Punishment in America’s Corporate Age by Samuel W. Buell; Free Market Criminal
Justice: How Democracy and Laissez Faire Undermine the Rule of Law by Darryl K.
Brown. 96 Tex. L. Rev. 163-179 (2017).
18. David
Hess. Business, corruption, and human
rights: towards a new responsibility for corporations to combat
corruption. 2017 Wis. L. Rev. 641-693.
19. Eric
C. Chaffee. Securities regulation in
virtual space. 74 Wash. & Lee L.
Rev. 1387-1456 (2017).
20. Merritt
B. Fox & Gabriel Rauterberg. Stock
market futurism. 42 J. Corp. L. 793-808
(2017).
21. Kevin
S. Haeberle. Discrimination
platforms. 42 J. Corp. L. 809-832
(2017).
22. Kristin
N. Johnson. Regulating innovation: high
frequency trading in dark pools. 42 J.
Corp. L. 833-886 (2017).
23. Merritt
B. Fox & Kevin S. Haeberle.
Evaluating stock-trading practices and their regulation. 42 J. Corp. L. 887-915 (2017).
February 16, 2018
24. Larry
Catá Backer. The human rights
obligations of state-owned enterprises: emerging conceptual structures and
principles in national and international law and policy. 50 Vand. J. Transnat’l L. 827-888 (2017).
25. Nicholas
Calcina Howson. China’s “corporatization
without privatization” and the late nineteenth century roots of a stubborn path
dependency. 50 Vand. J. Transnat’l L.
961-1006 (2017).
26. Pammela
S. Quinn. “Head-of-state-owned
enterprise” immunity. 50 Vand. J.
Transnat’l L. 1065-1090 (2017).
27. David
Rosenfeld. Admissions in SEC enforcement
cases: the revolution that wasn’t. 103
Iowa L. Rev. 113-184 (2017).
28. Anita
K. Krug. The other securities regulator:
a case study in regulatory damage. 92
Tul. L. Rev. 339-391 (2017).
February 23, 2018
29. Eric
C. Chaffee & Karie Davis-Nozemack.
Corporate tax avoidance and honoring the fiduciary duties owed to the
corporation and its stockholders. 58
B.C. L. Rev. 1425-1481 (2017).
30. Brandon
L. Garrett. The public interest in
corporate settlements. 58 B.C. L. Rev.
1483-1543 (2017).
31. Peter
Reilly. Corporate deferred prosecution
as discretionary injustice. 2017 Utah L.
Rev. 839-883.
32. Miriam
F. Weismann. The missing metrics of
sustainability: just how beneficial are benefit corporations? 42 Del. J. Corp. L. 1-50 (2017).
33. Israel
Klein. A change in accounting, a change
in law. 42 Del. J. Corp. L. 51-76 (2017).
34. Michael
B. Dorff. Why public benefit
corporations? 42 Del. J. Corp. L. 77-113
(2017).
35. Ronnie
Cohen, Gabriele Lingenfelter. Money
isn’t everything: why public benefit corporations should be required to
disclose non-financial information. 42
Del. J. Corp. L. 115-147 (2017).
36. Ben
W. Heineman Jr. Resolving the
partner-guardian tension: the key to general counsel independence. 42 Del. J. Corp. L. 149-186 (2017).
March 2, 2018
37. Shannon
Kathleen O’Byrne, Cindy A. Schipani.
Feminism(s), progressive corporate law, and the corporate oppression
remedy: seeking fairness and justice. 19
Geo. J. Gender & L. 61-111 (2017).
38. Peter
N. Levenberg. Directors' liability and shareholder remedies in South African
companies--evaluating foreign investor risk. 26 Tul. J. Int'l & Comp. L.
1-60 (2017).
39. Thomas
E. Rutledge. The 2017 amendments to Kentucky's business entity statutes. 56 U.
Louisville L. Rev. 55-81 (2017).
40. Benedict
Sheehy. Conceptual and institutional
interfaces between CSR, corporate law and the problem of social costs. 12 Va. L. & Bus. Rev. 93-147 (2017).
41. Larry
Catá Backer. Sovereign wealth funds,
capacity building, development, and governance.
52 Wake Forest L. Rev. 735-780 (2017).
42. David
F. Freeman Jr. U.S. financial regulation
of sovereign wealth funds. 52 Wake
Forest L. Rev. 781-814 (2017).
43. Enrico
Ginevra & Chiara Presciani.
Sovereign wealth fund transparency and the European rules on
institutional investor disclosure. 52
Wake Forest L. Rev. 815-835 (2017).
44. Locknie
Hsu. The role and future of sovereign
wealth funds: a trade and investment perspective. 52 Wake Forest L. Rev. 837-856 (2017).
45. Gabriele
Lattanzio & William L. Megginson.
International relations and sovereign wealth funds’ political value:
evidence from a quasi-natural experiment.
52 Wake Forest L. Rev. 857-888 (2017).
46. Paul
Rose. What responsibilities do sovereign
funds have to other investors? 52 Wake
Forest L. Rev. 889-916 (2017).
47. Patrick
J. Schena. When states invest at home:
the development role of sovereign wealth funds in public finance. 52 Wake Forest L. Rev. 917-947 (2017).
48. Beate
Sjåfjell, Heidi Rapp Nilsen & Benjamin J. Richardson. Investing in sustainability or feeding on
stranded assets? The Norwegian Government Pension Fund Global. 52 Wake Forest L. Rev. 949-979 (2017).
49. Chris
Thomale. Sovereign wealth and social
responsibility. 52 Wake Forest L. Rev.
981-995 (2017).
50. Edwin
M. Truman. Sovereign wealth fund
transparency and accountability explored.
52 Wake Forest L. Rev. 997-1026 (2017).
51. Marc-Philippe
Weller, Luca Kaller. Sovereign wealth
funds investing in Germany. 52 Wake
Forest L. Rev. 1027-1055 (2017).
52. Jill
E. Fisch. Standing voting instructions:
empowering the excluded retail investor.
102 Minn. L. Rev. 11-60 (2017).
March 9, 2018
53. Gwendolyn
J. Gordon. Environmental
personhood. 43 Colum. J. Envtl. L. 49-91
(2018).
54. Heather
Hughes. Property and the true-sale
doctrine. 19 U. Pa. J. Bus. L. 870-926
(2017).
March 16, 2018
55. Kevin
Crow, Lina Lorenzoni Escobar.
International corporate obligations, human rights, and the Urbaser standard: breaking new
ground? 36 B.U. Int’l L.J. 87-118
(2018).
56. Kurt
S. Schulzke, Gerlinde Berger-Walliser.
Toward a unified theory of materiality in securities law. 56 Colum. J. Transnat’l L. 6-70 (2017).
March 23, 2018
57. Brian
Kingsley Krumm. Fostering innovation and
entrepreneurship: Shark Tank
shouldn’t be the model. 70 Ark. L. Rev.
553-608 (2017).
58. Mihailis
E. Diamantis. Clockwork corporations: a
character theory of corporate punishment.
103 Iowa L. Rev. 507-569 (2018).
59. Ryan
M. Walters. When can you shoot the
messenger? Understanding the legal protections for entities providing
information on business products and services in the digital age. 96 Or. L. Rev. 185-248 (2017).
60. Joseph
Pileri. Uncharted waters? Legal ethics
and the benefit corporation. 8 St.
Mary’s J. Legal Mal. & Ethics 180-190 (2017).
61. Jay
T. Jorgensen. The Foreign Corrupt
Practices Act turns 40 — “reflections on Walmart’s enhanced ethics &
compliance program.” 5 Tex. A&M L.
Rev 237-252 (2017)
62. Anthony
J. Casey, Anthony Niblett. Self-driving
contracts. 43 J. Corp. L. 1-33 (2017).
63. Yaron
Nili. Out of sight, out of mind: the
case for improving director independence disclosure. 43 J. Corp. L. 35-76 (2017).
64. Amanda
M. Rose. The “reasonable investor” of federal
securities law: insights from tort law’s “reasonable person” & suggested
reforms. 43 J. Corp. L. 77-118 (2017).
March 30, 2018
65. Robert
C. Bird & Stephen Kim Park. Organic
corporate governance. 59 B.C. L. Rev.
21-69 (2018).
66. Matthew
Jennejohn. The architecture of contract
innovation. 59 B.C. L. Rev. 71-143
(2018).
67. Abbey
Stemler. The myth of the sharing economy
and its implications for regulating innovation.
67 Emory L.J. 197-241 (2017).
68. Matthew
C. Turk. Regulation by settlement. 66 U. Kan. L. Rev. 259-324 (2017).
69. Court
E. Golumbic. “The big chill”: personal
liability and the targeting of financial sector compliance officers. 69 Hastings L.J. 45-93 (2017).
April 6, 2018
70. Bret
Wells. Reform of corporate distributions
in subchapter C. 37 Va. Tax Rev. 365-419
(2018).
71. Douglas
M. Spencer. Corporations as conduits: a
cautionary note about regulating hypotheticals.
47 Stetson L. Rev. 225-258 (2018).
72. Lisa
Gilbert. After the “change election,”
the money in the political landscape. 47
Stetson L. Rev. 259-265 (2018).
73. Gretchen
Goldman, Genna Reed, Jacob Carter. Risks
to science-based policy under the Trump administration. 47 Stetson L. Rev. 267-293 (2018).
74. Kathy
Kiely. Digital disclosure cheats: an
anthology of cautionary tales and pro tips for the public interest
advocate. 47 Stetson L. Rev. 295-310
(2018).
75. Frederick
H. Alexander. Whose portfolio is it,
anyway? 47 Stetson L. Rev. 311-332
(2018).
76. Andrew
Verstein. Insider tainting: strategic
tipping of material nonpublic information.
112 Nw. U. L. Rev. 725-787 (2018).
77. Jill
E. Fisch, Jonah B. Gelbach & Jonathan Klick. The logic and limits of event studies in
securities fraud litigation. 96 Tex. L.
Rev. 553-618 (2018).
April 13, 2018
78. Jayme
Herschkopf. Morality and securities
fraud. 101 Marq. L. Rev. 453-504 (2017).
April 20, 2018
79. Christopher
W. Peterson. Piercing the corporate veil
by tort creditors. 13 J. Bus. &
Tech. L. 63-95 (2017).
80. Jacob
S. Sherkow. Cancer’s IP. 96 N.C. L. Rev. 297-380 (2018).
81. Kenneth
Ayotte, Anthony J. Casey & David A. Skeel Jr. Bankruptcy on the side. 112 Nw. U. L. Rev. 255-311 (2017).
82. K.J.
Martijn Cremers, Saura Masconale & Simone M. Sepe. CEO pay redux. 96 Tex. L. Rev. 205-278 (2017).
83. Shawn
Grant. Caution, curves ahead: does the future signal changes for whistleblowers?
42 Seton Hall Legis. J. 1-28 (2017).
April 27, 2018
84. Tracy
H. Porter, Susan S. Case & Matthew C. Mitchell. Is it freedom of or freedom from religion in
organizations? 17 J. Int’l Bus. & L.
1-24 (2017).
85. Ronald
J. Colombo. Religious liberty and the
business corporation. 17 J. Int’l Bus.
& L. 25-43 (2017).
86. Robert
H. Nelson. The financial crisis as a
religious crisis. 17 J. Int’l Bus. &
L. 45-86 (2017).
87. Sarah
Helene Duggin. God’s grace and the
marketplace: Mainline Protestant church, faith and business. 17 J. Int’l Bus. & L. 87-125 (2017).
88. Nikaela
Jacko Redd & Lutisha S. Vickerie.
The rise and fall of brick and mortar retail: the impact of emerging
technologies and executive choices on business failure. 17 J. Int’l Bus. & L. 127-171 (2017).
May 4, 2018
89. Max
Schanzenbach, Nadav Shoked. Reclaiming
fiduciary law for the city. 70 Stan. L.
Rev. 565-642 (2018).
90. Karen
Woody. “Declinations with disgorgement”
in FCPA enforcement. 51 U. Mich. J.L.
Reform 269-311 (2018).
91. Albert
H. Choi. Fee-shifting and shareholder
litigation. 104 Va. L. Rev. 59-111
(2018).
92. Eleanor
Lumsden. The future is mobile: financial
inclusion and technological innovation in the emerging world. 23 Stan. J.L. Bus. & Fin. 1-44 (2018).
93. Schan
Duff. The new financial stability regulation. 23 Stan. J.L. Bus. & Fin. 46-111 (2018).
94. Edmund
Mokhtarian, Alexander Lindgren. Rise of
the crypto hedge fund: operational issues and best practices for an emergent
investment industry. 23 Stan. J.L. Bus.
& Fin. 112-158 (2018).
95. Shivaram
Rajgopal, Roger M. White. Stock trades
of Securities and Exchange Commission employees. 60 J.L. & Econ. 441-477 (2017).
May 11, 2018
96. Charles
Penrod. The party’s over: it is time to
end unpaid internships at for-profit organizations. 19 W. Mich. U. Cooley J. Prac. & Clin. L.
1-29 (2017).
97. Donald
Clarke, Fang Lu. The law of China’s
local government debt: local government financing vehicles and their
bonds. 65 Am. J. Comp. L. 751-798
(2017).
May 18, 2018
98. John
R. Allison, Mark A. Lemley, David L. Schwartz.
How often do non-practicing entities win patent suits? 32 Berkeley Tech. L.J. 237-310 (2017).
99. Shannon
M. Roesler. Evaluating corporate speech
about science. 106 Geo. L.J. 447-514
(2018).
100. Jason
Malone & Tim Winslow. Financial
assurance: environmental protection as a cost of doing business. 93 N.D. L. Rev. 1-56 (2018).
101. Lynne
L. Dallas. Is there hope for change? The
evolution of conceptions of “good” corporate governance. 54 San Diego L. Rev. 491-564 (2017).
102. Matthew
D. Cain, Jill Fisch, Steven Davidoff Soloman & Randall S. Thomas. The
shifting tides of merger litigation. 71
Vand. L. Rev. 603-640 (2018).
103. Andrew
Verstein. The corporate governance of
national security. 95 Wash. U. L. Rev.
775-834 (2018).
104. Lynn
M. Lopucki. Algorithmic entities. 95 Wash. U. L. Rev. 887-953 (2018).
May 25, 2018
105. Maren
B. Worley. Holding investment bankers
liable for aiding and abetting corporate directors: the under-deterrent. 32 BYU J. Pub. L. 151-189 (2017).
106. Jena
Martin. Hiding in the light: the misuse
of disclosure to advance the business and human rights agenda. 56 Colum. J. Transnat’l L. 530-592 (2018).
107. Ruth
Jebe. Corporate sustainability reporting
and “material information”: an empirical study of materiality under the GRI and
frameworks. 33 Conn. J. Int’l
L. 95-135 (2017).
108. Timothy
W. Guinnane, Susana Martínez-Rodríguez.
Choice of enterprise form: Spain, 1886-1936. 34 J.L. Econ. & Org. 1-26 (2018).
109. Bernard
Sinclair-Desgagné, Sandrine Spaeter.
Incentive contracts and downside risk sharing. 34 J.L. Econ. & Org. 79-107 (2018).
110. Anthony
Moffa. Environmens rea. 122 Penn St. L. Rev. 299-346 (2018).
111. Martin
Edwards. The big crowd and the small
enterprise: intracorporate disputes in the close-but-crowdfunded firm. 122 Penn St. L. Rev. 411-462 (2018).
112. Peggy
Kirk Hall & Rusty Rumley. Legal
challenges facing unmanned aerial systems and commercial agriculture. 39 U. Ark. Little Rock L. Rev. 389-424
(2017).
113. Yehonatan
Givati. Of snitches and riches: optimal
IRS and SEC whistleblower rewards. 55
Harv. J. on Legis. 105-142 (2018).
114. Verity
Winship, Jennifer K. Robbennolt.
Admissions of guilt in civil enforcement. 102 Minn. L. Rev. 1077-1146 (2018).
June 1, 2018
115. Amy
Deen Westbrook, David A. Westbrook.
Unicorns, guardians, and the concentration of the U.S. equity markets. 96 Neb. L. Rev. 688-741 (2018).
116. Tamara
Belinfanti, Lynn Stout. Contested
visions: the value of systems theory for corporate law. 166 U. Pa. L. Rev. 578-631 (2018).
117. Caleb
N. Griffin. The hidden cost of
M&A. 2018 Colum. Bus. L. Rev.
70-129.
118. Anne
M. Tucker & student Holly van den Toorn.
Will swing pricing save sedentary shareholders? 2018 Colum. Bus. L. Rev. 130-208.
119. Bernard
S. Sharfman. The importance of the
business judgment rule. 14 N.Y.U. J.L.
& Bus. 27-69 (2017).
120. William
S. Laufer. The missing account of
progressive corporate criminal law. 14
N.Y.U. J.L. & Bus. 71-142 (2017).
121. Daniel
J. Morrissey. Are mutual funds robbing
retirement savings? 14 N.Y.U. J.L. &
Bus. 143-185 (2017).
122. Mira
Ganor. Toehold collaborations beyond
insider trading. 14 N.Y.U. J.L. &
Bus. 187-246 (2017).
123. Jonathan
G. Rohr. Freedom of contract and the
publicly traded uncorporation. 14 N.Y.U.
J.L. & Bus. 247-309 (2017).
124. Jon
Endean. A payoff to second best
pragmatism: rethinking entity classification for foreign companies. 14 N.Y.U. J.L. & Bus. 311-349 (2017).
125. Anne
Tucker. 20/20 vision in the long &
short-termism debate. 41 Seattle U. L.
Rev. 337-347 (2018).
126. Owen
D. Jones. Brain perspectives on investor
behavior and decision-making errors. 41
Seattle U. L. Rev. 349-366 (2018).
127. William
A. Birdthistle. Federalism of personal
finance: state & federal retirement plans.
41 Seattle U. L. Rev. 367-385 (2018).
128. K.J.
Martijn Cremers & Simone M. Sepe.
Institutional investors, corporate governance, and firm value. 41 Seattle U. L. Rev. 387-418 (2018).
129. Caroline
Flammer. Long-term executive
compensation as a remedy for corporate short-termism. 41 Seattle U. L. Rev. 419-424 (2018).
130. Elisabeth
de Fontenay. The myth of the ideal
investor. 41 Seattle U. L. Rev. 425-447
(2018).
131. Jim
Hawley, Jon Lukomnik. The long and short
of it: are we asking the right questions? Modern portfolio theory and time
horizons. 41 Seattle U. L. Rev. 449-474
(2018).
132. Claire
A. Hill. An identity theory of the
short- and long-term investor debate. 41
Seattle U. L. Rev. 475-495 (2018).
133. Jennifer
G. Hill. Good activist/bad activist: the
rise of international stewardship codes.
41 Seattle U. L. Rev. 497-524 (2018).
134. Frank
Partnoy. Specificity and time
horizons. 41 Seattle U. L. Rev. 525-541
(2018).
135. Rachelle
Sampson & Yuan Shi. Are investor
time horizons shortening? 41 Seattle U.
L. Rev. 543-550 (2018).
136. Lynn
Stout & Sergio Gramitto. Corporate
governance as privately-ordered public policy: a proposal. 41 Seattle U. L. Rev. 551-576 (2018).
137. Andrew
Verstein. Wrong-termism, right-termism,
and the liability structure of investor time horizons. 41 Seattle U. L. Rev. 577-611 (2018).
138. Harold
Weston, Conrad Ciccotello. Flash traders
(milliseconds) to indexed institutions (centuries): the challenges of an agency
theory approach to governance in the era of diverse investor time
horizons. 41 Seattle U. L. Rev. 613-653
(2018).
139. Verity
Winship, Jennifer K. Robbennolt. An
empirical study of admissions in SEC settlements. 60 Ariz. L. Rev. 1-66 (2018).
June 8, 2018
140. S.I.
Strong. Congress and commercial trusts:
dealing with diversity jurisdiction post-Americold. 69 Fla. L. Rev. 1021-1091 (2017).
141. Xuan-Thao
Nguyen. Zombie patents and zombie
companies with patents. 69 Fla. L. Rev.
1147-1156 (2017).
142. Samuel
W. Buell. Why do prosecutors say
anything? The case of corporate crime.
96 N.C. L. Rev. 823-858 (2018).
143. Cindy
R. Alexander & Yoon-Ho Alex Lee.
Non-prosecution of corporations: toward a model of cooperation and
leniency. 96 N.C. L. Rev. 859-901
(2018).
144. J.S.
Park. Blasius, bylaw amendment powers
& supermajority amendment bylaws. 18
UC Davis Bus. L.J. 129-159 (2017).
145. Gideon
Mark. Confidential witness interviews in
securities litigation. 96 N.C. L. Rev.
789-822 (2018).
146. Paul
G. Mahoney. Deregulation and the
subprime crisis. 104 Va. L. Rev. 235-300
(2018).
147. Merritt
B. Fox, Lawrence R. Glosten & Gabriel V. Rauterberg. Stock market manipulation and its
regulation. 35 Yale J. on Reg. 67-126
(2018).
June 15, 208
148. Jeremy
C. Kress. Board to death: how busy
directors could cause the next financial crisis. 59 B.C. L. Rev. 877-929 (2018).
149. Jongho
Kim. To be creditor or to be
shareholder, that is the question: is the debt-for-equity swap creditors’
financial suicide? 10 J. Bus.
Entrepreneurship & L. 359-460 (2017).
150. Grace
M. Giesel. Control of the
attorney-client privilege after mergers and other transformational
transactions: should control of the privilege be alienable by contract? 48 Seton Hall L. Rev. 309-352 (2018).
151. J.
William Callison. Dangling threads: Hobby
Lobby and corporate law issues. 48 U.
Mem. L. Rev. 447-461 (2017).
152. Daniel
Isaacson. The perfect storm is brewing
once again: what scaling back Dodd-Frank will mean for the credit default
swap. 10 J. Bus. Entrepreneurship &
L. 249-272 (2017).
July 6, 2018
153. J.
Maria Glover. “Encroachments and
oppressions”: the corporatization of procedure and the decline of rule of
law. 86 Fordham L. Rev. 2113-2130
(2018).
154. Uri
Benoliel, Jenny Buchan, Tony Gutentag.
Revisiting the rationality assumption of disclosure laws: an empirical
analysis. 46 Hofstra L. Rev. 469-488
(2017).
155. Lee
Epstein, William M. Landes, Hon. Richard A. Posner. When it comes to business the right and left
sides of the Court agree. 54 Wash. U.
J.L. & Pol’y 33-55 (2017).
156. Anthony
Michael Sabino. Reflections upon the
jurisprudence of Justice Antonin Scalia: selections from securities law,
arbitration, and administrative law. 46
Hofstra L. Rev. 445-467 (2017).
157. Ryan
Bubb, Marcel Kahan. Regulating
motivation: a new perspective on the Volcker Rule. 96 Tex. L. Rev. 1019-1051 (2018).
July 13, 2018
158. Curtis
J. Milhaupt, Mariana Pargendler.
Governance challenges of listed state-owned enterprises around the
world: national experiences and a framework for reform. 50 Cornell Int’l L.J. 473-542 (2017).
159. Christopher
W. Peterson. Piercing the corporate veil
in Nebraska. 51 Creighton L. Rev.
247-279 (2018).
160. Gregory
M. Gilchrist. Individual accountability
for corporate crime. 34 Ga. St. U. L.
Rev. 335-388 (2018).
161. Matteo
Gatti. Reconsidering the merger process:
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215. Ronald
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220. Chang-hsien
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222. Jeff
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223. Joseph
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224. Jeff
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226. Mohsen
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230. Mark
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233. Beth
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234. Bernard
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256. Lisa
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257. Sarah
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258. Albert
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259. Kristen
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260. Joshua
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269.
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270. Linda
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293.
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294. Kishanthi
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296. David
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298. Ursula
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299. Jonas
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Inquiry 981-1026 (2018).
325. Leonard
McCarthy. Coming of age: the new face of
integrity compliance. 90 Temp. L. Rev.
603-609 (2018).
326. Todd
Haugh. Caremark’s behavioral
legacy. 90 Temp. L. Rev. 611-646 (2018).
327. Paul
E. McGreal. Caremark in the arc of
compliance history. 90 Temp. L. Rev.
647-680 (2018).
328. Claire
A. Hill. Caremark as soft law. 90 Temp. L. Rev. 681-697 (2018).
329. James
A. Fanto. The governing authority’s
responsibilities in compliance and risk management, as seen in the American Law
Institute’s Draft Principles of compliance, risk management, and enforcement. 90 Temp. L. Rev. 699-726 (2018).
330. Donald
C. Langevoort. Caremark and compliance: a twenty-year lookback. 90 Temp. L. Rev. 727-742 (2018).
December
21, 2018
331. Christopher
M. Brumer. Center-left politics and
corporate governance: what is the "progressive" agenda? 2018 BYU L. Rev. 267-333.
332. Joseph
K. Leahy. Intermediate scrutiny for
corporate political contributions. 44
Fla. St. U. L. Rev. 1119-1224 (2017).
333. Carol
Goforth. Making the case for the Uniform
Limited Liability Company Act (2013) in Arkansas. 40 U. Ark. Little Rock L. Rev. 187-230 (2017).
334. Matthew
J. Wilkins. You don't need love...but it
helps: insider trading law after Salman. 106 Ky. L.J. 433-461 (2017-2018).
335. Kevin
S. Haeberle, M. Todd Henderson. A new
market-based approach to securities law. 85 U. Chi. L. Rev. 1313-1393 (2018).
December 28, 2018
336. Victoria
Barnes. Judicial intervention in early corporate governance disputes:
Vice-Chancellor Shadwell's lost judgment in Mozley v. Alston (1847). 58 Am. J. Legal Hist. 394-413 (2018).
337. Sarath
Sanga. A theory of corporate joint
ventures. 106 Cal. L. Rev. 1437-1475
(2018).
338. Karen
C. Burke. Exploiting the Medicare tax loophole. 21 Fla. Tax Rev. 570-621 (2018).
339. James
R. Repetti. The impact of the 2017 Act's
tax rate changes on choice of entity. 21
Fla. Tax Rev. 686-714 (2018).
340. Erik
Roder. Combining limited liability and transparent taxation: lessons from the
convergent evolution of GmbH & Co. KGs, S Corporations, LLCs, and other
functionally equivalent entities. 21 Fla. Tax Rev. 762-843 (2018).
341. Sara
Dezalay. Lawyers in Africa: brokers of the state, intermediaries of
globalization. 25 Ind. J. Global Legal Stud. 639-669 (2018).
342. Cheryl
Scarboro, Diana Wielocha. Role of employee discipline in FCPA settlements:
balancing competing considerations. 50 N.Y.U. J. Int'l L. & Pol. 1207-1235
(2018). [
343. Russell
Korobkin, Michael Dorff. Bargaining with the CEO: the case for "negotiate
first, choose second." 34 Negotiation J. 347-377 (2018).
344. Samuel
Dinnar, Lawrence Susskind. The eight big negotiation mistakes that
entrepreneurs make. 34 Negotiation J. 401-413 (2018).
345. Ronald
J. Colombo. An antitrust approach to corporate free exercise claims. 92 St. John's L. Rev. 29-90 (2018).
346. Valerie
J. Pelton. Jebel Ali: open for business. 27 Transnat'l L. & Contemp. Probs. 375-401
(2018).
347. William
S. Laufer. A very special regulatory milestone. 20 U. Pa. J. Bus. L. 392-428 (2017).
348. Darren
Rosenblum. When does sex diversity on boards benefit firms? 20 U. Pa. J. Bus. L. 429-484 (2017).
Additional Articles Published During 2018
349. Mark
L Steinberg. Texas Gulf Sulphur at
Fifty-A Contemporary and Historical Perspective. 71 SMU L. Rev. 625-641 (2018).
350. Steven
M. Bainbridge. Equal Access to
Information: The Fraud at the Heart of Texas Gulf Sulphur. 71 SMU L. Rev. 643-652 (2018).
351. Richard M. Buxbaum. From TGS Conservatorships to Sarbanes-Oxley
Fair Funds. 71 SMU L. Rev. 653-674.
(2018).
352. Wendy G. Couture. Texas Gulf Sulphur: A Case Study on Responding
to Market Rumors. 71 SMU L. Rev. 675-695 (2018).
353. James
D. Cox. Seeking an Objective for
Regulating Insider Trading Through Texas Gulf Sulphur. 71 L. Rev. 697-711
(2018).
354. Onnig
H. Dombalagian. Texas Gulf Sulphur and
Information Disclosure Policy. 71 SMU L.
Rev.713-727 (2018).
355. Lisa
M. Fairfax. From Equality to Duty: On
Altering the Reach, Impact, and Meaning of the Texas Gulf Legacy. 71 SMU L.
Rev. 729-748 (2018).
356. Jill
E. Fisch. Constructive Ambiguity and Judicial
Development of Insider Trading. 71 SMU
L. Rev. 749-766 (2018).
357. Merritt
B. Fox & George N. Tepe. Personal
Benefit Has No Place in Misappropriation Tipping Cases. 71 SMU L. Rev. 767-782
(2018).
358. Tamar
Frankel. Insider Trading. 71 SMU L. Rev. 783-797 (2018).
359. Roberta.
S. Karmel. Will Fifty Years of the SEC’s
Disgorgement Remedy Be Abolished? 71 SMU
L. Rev. 799 810 (2018).
360. Michael
J. Kaufan. From Texas Gulf Sulphur to
Laudato Si': Mining Equitable Principles from Insider Trading Law. 71 SMU L.
Rev.811-833 (2018).
361. Donald
C. Langevoort. From Texas Gulf Sulphur
to Chiarella: A Tale of Two Duties. 71
SMU L.Rev.835-851 (2018).
362. Mark
J. Loewenstein. Thinking Fast and Slow
About the Concept of Materiality. 71 SMU
L. Rev.853-868 (2018).
363. Jonathan
Macey. Martoma and Newman: Valid
Corporate Purpose and the Personal Benefit Test. 71 SMU L. Rev. 869-882 (2018).
364. Daniel
J. Morrissey. Taming Rule 10b-5-1: The
Unfinished Business of Texas Gulf Sulphur. 71 SMU L. Rev.883-894 (2018).
365. Donna
M. Nagy. The Statutory Authority for
Court-Ordered Disgorgement in SEC Enforcement Actions. 71 SMU L. Rev. 895-926
(2018).
366. Adam
C. Pritchard & Robert B. Thompson. Texas
Gulf Sulphur and the Genesis of Corporate Liability Under Rule l0b-5. 71 SMU L. Rev. 927-946 (2018).
367. Margaret
Sachs. Unintended Consequences: The Link
Between Judge Friendly's Texas Gulf Sulphur Concurrence and Recent Supreme
Court Decisions Misconstruing Rule 10b-5. 71 SMU L. Rev. 947-965 (2018).
368. James
C. Spindler. The Coasian Firm and Insider Trading, Revisited. 71 SMU L. Rev. 967-985 (2018).
369. Manning
G. Warren III. A Birthday Toast to Texas Gulf Sulphur. 71 SMU L. Rev. 987-998 (2018).
370. Verity
Winship. Disgorgement in Insider Trading Cases: FY2005-FY2015. 71 SMU L. Rev. 999-1013 (2018).
371. Henry
T. C. Hu & John D. Morley. A
Regulatory Framework for Exchange-Traded Funds. 91 S. Cal. L. Rev. 839-941 (2018)
372. Alan
M. Weinberger. Henry Ford’s Wingman: A Perspective
on the Centennial of Dodge v. Ford. 14 NYU J. L.& Bus. 1013 (2018).
373. Sean
Griffin, Dan Awrey & Blanaid Clake. Resolving
the Crisis in U.S. Merger Regulation: A Transatlantic Alternative to the
Perpetual Litigation Machine, 35 Yale J. Reg. 1 (2018).
374. Jill
E. Fisch, Darius Palia & Steven Davidoff Solomon. Is
Say on Pay All About Pay? The Impact of Firm Performance. 8 Harv. Bus. L. Rev. 101 (2018).
375. Martin
Gelter & Geneviève Helleringer. Opportunity Makes
a Thief: Corporate Opportunities as Legal
Transplant and Convergence in Corporate Law.
15 Berkeley Bus. L.J. 92-183 (2018).
376. Gina-Gail
Fletcher. Legitimate Yet Manipulative:
The Conundrum of Open-Market Manipulation. 68 Duke. L.J. 479 (2018).
377. Debra
C. Jeter, Randall S. Thomas, Harwell Wells. Democracy and Dysfunction: Rural Electric
Cooperatives and the Surprising Persistence of the Separation of Ownership and
Control. 70 Ala. L. Rev. 361 (2018).
378. Stephen
F. Diamond and Jennifer W. Kuan. Are the
stock markets "rigged"? An empirical analysis of regulatory change. 55 Int’l Rev. L. & Econ. 33-40 (2018).
379. Lawrence
A. Hamermesh & Michael L. Wachter. Finding the Right Balance in
Appraisal Litigation: Deal Price, Deal Process, and Synergies. 73 Bus. Law. 961-1009 (2018).
380. Tom
C.W. Lin. Incorporating Social Activism.
98 B.U. L. Rev. 1535-1605 (2018).
381. Joshua
Fershee. The End of Responsible Growth
and Governance? The Risks Posed by Social Enterprise Enabling Statutes and the
Demise of Director Primacy. 19 Tenn. J.
Bus. L. 361 (2018)
382.
George S. Geis. Traceable Shares and Corporate Law. 113 Nw. U. L.Rev. 227 (2018)
383. Virginia
Harper Ho. Nonfinancial Disclosure &
The Costs of Private Ordering. 55 Am.
Bus. L. J. 407-474 (2018)
384. Kathryn
Judge. Investor-Driven Financial
Innovation. 8 Harv. Bus. L. Rev. 291 (2018).
385. William
W Bratton & Adam J. Levitin. The New
Bond Workouts. 166 U. Pa. L. Rev.
1597-1674 (2018).
386. Helen Hershkoff and Marcel Kahan. Forum-Selection Provisions in Corporate 'Contracts’. 93 Wash. L. Rev. 265 (2018).
387. Grant
M. Hayden & Matthew T. Bodie. Shareholder Voting and the
Symbolic Politics of Corporation as
Contract. 53 Wake Forest L. Rev. 511-557 (2018).
388. Michal Barzuza. Inefficient Tailoring: The Private Ordering
Paradox in Corporate Law. 8 Harv.
Bus. L. Rev. 131 (2018).
389. Edward
B. Rock & Daniel L. Rubinfeld. Antitrust for Institutional Investors. 82 Antitrust L. J. 221-78 (2018).
390. James
J. Park. Insider Trading and the Integrity of Mandatory Disclosure. 2018 Wis. L. Rev. 1133-1191 (2018)
391. Constance
Z. Wagner. Evolving Norms of Corporate Social Responsibility:
Lessons Learned from the European Union Directive on Non-Financial Reporting. 19 Tenn. J. Bus. L. 619 (2018).
392. Yesha
Yadav. Too-Big-to-Fail Shareholders. 103
Minn. L. Rev. 101 (2018).
393. Chris
Brummer and Yesha Yadav. Fintech and the
Innovation Trilemma. 107 Geo. L. J. 235
(2018)
394. Mark
J. Roe. Stock-Market Short-Termism’s
Impact. 167 U. Pa. L. Rev. 71-121 (2018).
395. Stephen
J. Lubben & Arthur E. Wilmarth, Jr. "Too Big and Unable to Fail." 69 Fla. L. Rev. 1205-1247 (2017)
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