Part I: The Eroding Trust, Truth, and Culture of Honesty
1: The Spreading Abuse of Trust and Deception
2: Old and New Concerns
3: Towards Abuse of Trust and Mistrust
4: Towards Deception
5: Towards a Different American Culture
Part II: Rising Opportunities and Temptations and Falling Barriers
to Abuse of Trust and Deception
6: Rising Opportunities and Temptations
7: Falling Barriers to Abuse of Trust and Deception: The Shift to
Weaker Morality, Weaker Law and Stronger Market Discipline
8: Falling Barriers to Abuse of Trust and Deception: The Hidden
Changes in Legal Doctrine and Interpretation
9: The Shift from Professions to Businesses
10: In Markets We Trust
11: Why Did Legal Enforcement Fail to Stem the Avalanche of
Fraud?
12: Towards an Honest Society
Tamar Frankel is Professor of Law at Boston University. She is also the author of Securitization: Structured Financing, Financial Assets Pools, and Asset-Backed Securities (1991) and co-author of The Regulation of Money Managers (2001), and Investment Management Regulation (2003).
"Tamar Frankel sounds a warning that America's commitment to
minimal standards of good faith in business dealing is being
progressively eroded, with Enron and World Com being only the tip
of a very large iceberg. Disturbingly this corruption has been
tolerated or even justified by decision-makers and opinion formers.
Frankel provides a diamond-clear analysis, drawing on a deep
knowledge of law, business, ethics, philosophy, sociology, and
economic theory. She
has produced a compelling case for American business, law and
economics to make an account of the soul and repent."--Dr. Joshua
Getzler, Fellow and Lecturer, Faculty of Law, Oxford University
"Tamar Frankel has written a brilliant analysis of the ethical
deterioration of corporate America and sets forth a practical way
of redirecting our misguided culture. This immensely readable book
pulls no punches in calling for a mass movement towards an 'honest
society which will reap the rewards of honesty.'"--Arthur Levitt,
Former Chairman, United States Securities and Exchange
Commission
"Tamar Frankel's book, Trust and Honesty: America's Culture at a
Cross Road, is a provocative and broad-sweeping assessment of
American culture, especially business culture. Weaving together
press stories, observations, and research from economics, law,
psychology, and sociology, Frankel draws a disturbing conclusion:
Those in positions in trust are less trustworthy and our society is
weakened by this trend."--Peter Tufano, Sylvan C. Coleman
Professor
of Financial Management, Harvard Business School
"In this timely and thought-provoking book, Tamar Frankel points
out the important role that social norms and attitudes play in good
corporate governance. What makes a society dishonest, Frankel
argues forcefully, is not merely fraud but a general acceptance of
fraud; when market participants begin to assume that others will
cut corners whenever they can get away with it, the trust needed
for economic prosperity will be undermined. A well functioning
corporate
system, Frankel suggests, is not merely the presence of good legal
rules but also general aspirations to honesty. The book makes the
reader stop and think, and no one who reads it will fail to
recognize the importance of the issues it raises."--Lucian Bebchuk,
Harvard Law School
"A valuable contemporary contribution to longstanding inquiry about
the optimal mix of markets and oversight in economic life; Tamar
Frankel offers fresh perspectives emphasizing the role of honesty
in the analysis."-Lawrence A. Cunningham, Boston College Law
School
"Tamar Frankel sounds a warning that America's commitment to
minimal standards of good faith in business dealing is being
progressively eroded, with Enron and World Com being only the tip
of a very large iceberg. Disturbingly this corruption has been
tolerated or even justified by decision-makers and opinion formers.
Frankel provides a diamond-clear analysis, drawing on a deep
knowledge of law, business, ethics, philosophy, sociology, and
economic theory. She
has produced a compelling case for American business, law and
economics to make an account of the soul and repent."--Dr. Joshua
Getzler, Fellow and Lecturer, Faculty of Law, Oxford University
"Tamar Frankel has written a brilliant analysis of the ethical
deterioration of corporate America and sets forth a practical way
of redirecting our misguided culture. This immensely readable book
pulls no punches in calling for a mass movement towards an 'honest
society which will reap the rewards of honesty.'"--Arthur Levitt,
Former Chairman, United States Securities and Exchange
Commission
"Tamar Frankel's book, Trust and Honesty: America's Culture at a
Cross Road, is a provocative and broad-sweeping assessment of
American culture, especially business culture. Weaving together
press stories, observations, and research from economics, law,
psychology, and sociology, Frankel draws a disturbing conclusion:
Those in positions in trust are less trustworthy and our society is
weakened by this trend."--Peter Tufano, Sylvan C. Coleman
Professor
of Financial Management, Harvard Business School
"In this timely and thought-provoking book, Tamar Frankel points
out the important role that social norms and attitudes play in good
corporate governance. What makes a society dishonest, Frankel
argues forcefully, is not merely fraud but a general acceptance of
fraud; when market participants begin to assume that others will
cut corners whenever they can get away with it, the trust needed
for economic prosperity will be undermined. A well functioning
corporate
system, Frankel suggests, is not merely the presence of good legal
rules but also general aspirations to honesty. The book makes the
reader stop and think, and no one who reads it will fail to
recognize the importance of the issues it raises."--Lucian Bebchuk,
Harvard Law School
"A valuable contemporary contribution to longstanding inquiry about
the optimal mix of markets and oversight in economic life; Tamar
Frankel offers fresh perspectives emphasizing the role of honesty
in the analysis."-Lawrence A. Cunningham, Boston College Law School
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