Prologue 1. Review of Corporations and Corporate Law, Contract Law, Property Law, Agency Law, and Trust Law Part I Corporations, Owners of Shares and Investors in Shares: Economic, Finance, Investment, and Accounting Considerations 2. Corporations and Economic Considerations 3. Corporations and Finance Considerations: Corporations, Owners of Shares, and Investors in Shares 4. Corporations and Investment Considerations: Corporations, Owners of Shares, and Investors in Shares 5. Corporations and Accounting Considerations: Corporations, Owners of Shares, and Investors in Shares PART II The Nature of the Firm and Theory of the Firm 6. The Nature of the Firm 7. The Theory of the Firm PART III Capital, Capitalism, and the Communist Manifesto 8. Capital 9. Capitalism 10. Marx: Capital, Capitalism, Capitalists, Corporations, and the Communist Manifesto Part IV The Contradictions of Economics and Corporate Law 11. Review of the Contradictions of Corporate Law 12. Contradictions of Corporate Law, Economics, Finance, Investment, Accounting, and the Theory of the Firm Epilogue
Wm. Dennis Huber received a DBA in international business, accounting, finance, and economics from the University of Sarasota, Florida; a JD, an MBA in accounting and finance, an MA in economics, an Ed.M., and an MS in public policy, and a BA in sociology and psychology from the State University of New York at Buffalo. He also has an LL.M. in homeland and national security law from the Western Michigan University Thomas M. Cooley School of Law. He is a certified public accountant and admitted to the New York Bar. He has taught at universities in the U.S., Canada, Mexico, and the Middle East.
"The book is very interesting starting from the idea itself to the well cited information in each chapter. It is straightforward, simple language, systematic in its presentation and at the same time eligible to be used for all levels of learning; undergrad/grad/researchers,etc., covered most of the important points in each topic, cleared out the confusion between the different laws (Agency law, Trust law and Corporate law...) and the difference between the nature of the firm and the theory of the firm…complete and well presented." — Dina Rady, Ph.D., American University and George Washington University
Ask a Question About this Product More... |