No. 35-04, June 2012
Index
- Table of Contents
- Strengthening Investment in Public Corporations Through the Uncorporation
- The Post-revolutionary Period in Corporate Law: Returning to the Theory of the Firm
- Mind Control: Firms and the Production of Ideas
- Theories of the Firm and Judicial Uncertainty
- Salomon Redux: the Moralities of Business
- Law and Legal Theory in the History of Corporate Responsibility: Corporate Personhood
- Nevada and the Market for Corporate Law
- We Don't Need You Anymore: Corporate Social Responsibilities, Executive Class Interests, and Solving Mizruchi and Hirschman's Paradox
- Hired to Invent vs. Work Made for Hire: Resolving the Inconsistency Among Rights of Corporate Personhood, Authorship, and Inventorship
- Coase, Knight, and the Nexus-of-contracts Theory of the Firm: a Reflection on Reification, Reality, and the
- The Evolution of the American Corporation and Global Organizational Biodiversity
- The Citizen Shareholder: Modernizing the Agency Paradigm to Reflect How and Why a Majority of Americans Invest in the Market
- A Shallow Harbor and a Cold Horizon: the Deceptive Promise of Modern Agency Law for the Theory of the Firm
- The Future of Socialism
- Consumer Lock-in and the Theory of the Firm
- Rethinking the Nature of the Firm: the Corporation as a Governance Object
- Must the House Always Win?: a Critique of Rousso v. State
- Order for the Courts: Reforming the Nollan/dolan Threshold Inquiry for Exactions
- Members Only: the Need for Reform in U.s. Intercountry Adoption Policy