Small jurisdictions have become significant players in cross-border corporate and financial services. Their nature, legal status, and market roles, however, remain under-theorized. Lacking a sufficiently nuanced framework to describe their functions in cross-border finance - and the peculiar strengths of those achieving global dominance in the marketplace - it remains impossible to evaluate their impacts in a comprehensive manner. This book advances a new conceptual framework to refine the analysis and direct it toward more productive inquiries. Bruner canvasses extant theoretical...
Small jurisdictions have become significant players in cross-border corporate and financial services. Their nature, legal status, and market roles, ho...
The corporate governance systems of Australia, Canada, the United Kingdom, and the United States are often characterized as a single Anglo-American system prioritizing shareholders' interests over those of other corporate stakeholders. Such generalizations, however, obscure substantial differences across the common-law world. Contrary to popular belief, shareholders in the United Kingdom and jurisdictions following its lead are far more powerful and central to the aims of the corporation than are shareholders in the United States. This book presents a new comparative theory to explain this...
The corporate governance systems of Australia, Canada, the United Kingdom, and the United States are often characterized as a single Anglo-American sy...