1: John Armour, Henry Hansmann, Reinier Kraakman, and Mariana
Pargendler: What is Corporate Law?
2: John Armour, Henry Hansmann, and Reinier Kraakman: Agency
Problems and Legal Strategies
3: John Armour, Luca Enriques, Henry Hansmann, and Reinier
Kraakman: The Basic Governance Structure: The Interests of
Shareholders as a Class
4: Luca Enriques, Henry Hansmann, Reinier Kraakman, and Mariana
Pargendler: The Basic Governance Structure: Minority Shareholders
and Non-Shareholder Constituencies
5: John Armour, Gerard Hertig, and Hideki Kanda: Transactions with
Creditors
6: Luca Enriques, Gerard Hertig, Hideki Kanda, and Mariana
Pargendler: Related-Party Transactions
7: Edward Rock, Paul Davies, Hideki Kanda, Reinier Kraakman, and
Wolf-Georg Ringe: Fundamental Changes
8: Paul Davies, Klaus Hopt, and Wolf-Georg Ringe: Control
Transactions
9: Luca Enriques, Gerard Hertig, Reinier Kraakman, and Edward Rock:
Corporate Law and Securities Markets
10: John Armour, Luca Enriques, Mariana Pargendler, and Wolf-Georg
Ringe: Beyond the Anatomy
Reinier Kraakman is the Ezra Ripley Thayer Professor of Law at
Harvard Law School and a Fellow of the European Corporate
Governance Institute. He has written numerous articles on corporate
law and the economic analysis of corporate liability regimes. He
teaches courses in corporate law, corporate finances, and seminars
on the theory of corporate law and comparative corporate
governance. John Armour is Hogan Lovells Professor of Law and
Finance at the University of
Oxford and a Fellow of the European Corporate Governance Institute.
He was previously a member of the Faculty of Law and the
interdisciplinary Centre for Business Research at the University
of
Cambridge. He has held visiting posts at various institutions
including the University of Chicago, Columbia Law School, the
University of Frankfurt, the Max Planck Institute for Comparative
Private Law, Hamburg, and the University of Pennsylvania Law
School. His main research interests lie in company law, corporate
insolvency law, and financial regulation, in which areas he has
published widely. He has been involved in policy projects
commissioned by the UK's Department of Trade and Industry,
Financial Services Authority and Insolvency Service, the
Commonwealth Secretariat, and the World Bank. He currently serves
as a member of the European Commission's Informal Company Law
Expert Group.
Paul Davies is a Senior Research Fellow in the Centre for
Commercial Law at Harris Manchester College, University of Oxford.
He was the Allen & Overy Professor of Corporate Law, University of
Oxford, between 2009 and 2014. Between 1998 and 2009 he was the
Cassel Professor of Commercial Law at the London School of
Economics and Political Science. He was a member of the Steering
Group for the Company Law Review which preceded the enactment of
the Companies Act 2006, and has been involved
recently in policy-related work for the UK Treasury. His most
recent works include the 10th edition of Gower and Davies,
Principles of Modern Company Law (Sweet & Maxwell, 2016, with Sarah
Worthington); and
Introduction to Company Law (OUP, 2nd ed., 2010). He is a Fellow of
the European Corporate Governance Institute, a Fellow of the
British Academy, and an honorary Queen's Counsel.
Luca Enriques is the Allen & Overy Professor of Corporate Law in
the Faculty of Law, University of Oxford, and a European Corporate
Governance Institute Research Fellow. He has been Professor of
Business Law at the University of Bologna and LUISS-Rome. Between
2007 and 2012, he served as a Commissioner at Consob, the Italian
Securities and Exchange Commission. He has been Visiting Professor
at various institutions, including Harvard Law School, Instituto de
Impresa (Madrid), and IDC
Herzliya. He has published several books and articles on topics
relating to corporate law, corporate governance, and financial
regulation. He is a coauthor, together with John Armour, Paul
Davies, and others, of
Principles of Financial Regulation (OUP, 2016). Henry Hansmann is
the Oscar M. Ruebhausen Professor of Law at the Yale Law School.
His scholarship has focused principally on the law and economics of
organizational ownership and structure, and has dealt with all
types of legal entities, both profit-seeking and nonprofit, private
and public. He has been Professor or Visiting Professor at Harvard
University, New York University, and the University of Pennsylvania
Law Schools. Recent publications
include Legal Entities as Transferable Bundles of Contracts (with
Kenneth Ayotte), 111 Michigan Law Review 715 (2013), and External
and Internal Asset Partitioning: Corporations and Their
Subsidiaries
(with Richard Squire), in Jeffrey Gordon and Georg Ringe (eds.),
The Oxford Handbook of Corporate Law and Governance (OUP,
forthcoming). He is a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and
Sciences and the European Corporate Governance Institute. Gerard
Hertig is Professor of Law at ETH Zurich and a European Corporate
Governance Institute research fellow. He was previously Professor
of Administrative Law and Director of the Centre d'Études
Juridiques Européennes at the University
of Geneva Law School (1987-1995). He has been a visiting professor
at leading law schools in Asia, Europe, and the United States, and
practiced law as a member of the Geneva bar. Recent publications
include
Decision-Making During the Crisis: Why Did the Treasury Let
Commercial Banks Fail? (with Ettore Croci and Eric Nowak), Journal
of Empirical Finance (2016); Governance by Institutional Investors
in a Stakeholder World, in The Oxford Handbook of Corporate Law and
Governance (OUP, forthcoming); Shadow Resolutions as a No-No in a
Sound Banking Union, with Luca Enriques, in Financial Regulation: A
Transatlantic Perspective (CUP, 2015). Klaus Hopt was Director of
the Max Planck Institute for
Comparative and International Private Law in Hamburg, Germany. His
main areas of specialization include commercial law, corporate law,
and banking and securities regulation. He has been Professor of Law
in
Tübingen, Florence, Bern, and Munich, Visiting Professor at
numerous universities in Europe, Japan, and the USA, including the
University of Pennsylvania, the University of Chicago, NYU,
Harvard, and Columbia, and was a judge of the Court of Appeals,
Stuttgart, Germany. He served as a member of the High Level Group
of Experts mandated by the European Commission to recommend EU
company and takeover law reforms. He is a Member of the German
National Academy (Leopoldina). Recent publications
include Comparative Corporate Governance (CUP, 2013, with Andreas
Fleckner (eds.)) and Corporate Boards in Law and Practice (OUP,
2013, with Paul Davies et al. (eds.)). Hideki Kanda is Professor of
Law at
Gakushuin University Law School from 2016. His main areas of
specialization include commercial law, corporate law, banking
regulation, and securities regulation. He was Professor of Law at
the University of Tokyo until 2016. He was also Visiting Professor
of Law at the University of Chicago Law School (1989, 1991, and
1993) and at Harvard Law School (1996). Recent publications include
Corporate Law (18th ed, Kobundo, 2016, in Japanese), Comparative
Corporate Governance (Oxford University Press,
1998, with Klaus Hopt et al (eds.)), and Economics of Corporate Law
(University of Tokyo Press, 1998, with Yoshiro Miwa and Noriyuki
Yanagawa (eds.), in Japanese). Mariana Pargendler is Professor
of
Law at FGV Law School in São Paulo (FGV Direito SP), where she
directs the Center for Law, Economics, and Governance. She is also
Global Associate Professor of Law at New York University School of
Law and has been a Visiting Professor of Law at Stanford Law
School. She is the author of numerous articles on corporate law and
comparative corporate governance. Her main recent publications
include The Evolution of Shareholder Voting Rights: Separation of
Ownership and Consumption (with Henry
Hansmann), 123 Yale Law Journal 948 (2014), Politics in the
Origins: The Making of Corporate Law in Nineteenth-Century Brazil,
60 American Journal of Comparative Law 805 (2013), and State
Ownership and
Corporate Governance, 80 Fordham Law Review 2917 (2012). Wolf-Georg
Ringe is Professor of International Commercial Law at Copenhagen
Business School and Visiting Professor at the University of Oxford
Faculty of Law. He has held visiting positions at various
institutions in Europe and North America, including Columbia Law
School and Vanderbilt University. He is the editor of the new
Journal of Financial Regulation, which has been published by Oxford
University Press since 2015. He has been
involved in policy work with both the European Commission and the
European Parliament on issues of European Corporate Law. His
current research interests are in the general areas of law and
finance,
comparative corporate governance, capital and financial Markets,
insolvency law, and conflict of laws. Recent publications include
The Deconstruction of Equity (OUP 2016) and The Oxford Handbook of
Corporate Law and Governance (OUP, forthcoming, with Jeffrey Gordon
(eds.)). Edward Rock is Professor of Law at New York University Law
School and director of NYU's Institute for Corporate Governance and
Finance. He writes widely on corporate law, has been Visiting
Professor at the Universities of
Frankfurt am Main, Jerusalem, and Columbia, and has practiced law
as a member of the Pennsylvania bar. Recent publications include
Does Majority Voting Improve Board Accountability? (with Stephen
Choi,
Jill Fisch, and Marcel Kahan), University of Chicago Law Review
(forthcoming), Institutional Investors in Corporate Governance, in
The Oxford Handbook of Corporate Law and Governance (OUP,
forthcoming), and Symbolic Corporate Governance Politics (with
Marcel Kahan), 94 Boston University Law Review 1997 (2014).
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