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Company law in context
Text and materials
David Kershaw
872 pages
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246x171mm
978-0-19-921594-2
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Paperback
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25 June 2009
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- Company Law in Context innovates in combining detailed up-to-date commentary with selected extracts from company law source materials. The book covers key cases in depth, enabling students to engage critically with judgments, issues, and policies.
- The book provides students with the economic, business, and social context in which company law operates, enabling them to understand its application and relevance.
- Students are shown the practical side of company law with a running case study which follows the lifecycle of a company and its legal requirements from registration through to flotation.
- The author draws selectively on comparative materials (US and Germany in particular), enabling students to understand the distinctiveness of UK company law and the policy choices made by UK regulators.
- David Kershaw's lively and dynamic writing style ensures that students engage fully with the subject and obtain a full critical understanding.
- There is extensive use of in-chapter questions, encouraging students to engage critically with the issues at stake and providing points for discussion in seminars.
Company Law in Context is an ideal main text for company law and corporate governance courses at both undergraduate and postgraduate level. In this sophisticated book, David Kershaw combines commentary and explanation (60%) with the primary case and statutory materials (40%). The book places the study of company law in its economic, business, and social context in order to make more accessible and relevant the cases, statutes, and other forms of regulation that make up company law. One technique deployed by the book to contextualise company law is the use
of a simple case study that tracks, through the different chapters of the book, the development and expansion of a business - from sole trader to listed company. Online Resource Centre Company Law in Context is accompanied by an Online Resource Centre offering the following features for students: - twice-yearly updates to changes in cases and legislation (particularly important given the recent implementation of the Companies Act 2006) - annotated web links to key online sources, directing students to the most accurate, up-to-date and relevant information on the web - podcasts accompanying each chapter, to be used when the subject is first studied and during
revision - interactive ('flashcard') glossary, so that students can familiarise themselves with and test themselves on the complex terminology and jargon of company law The following resources are also provided for lecturers: - diagrams and charts in PowerPoint to show in lectures and seminars to facilitate students' understanding of challenging cases and conceptsReadership: Students on company law courses and corporate governance courses.
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David Kershaw, Senior Lecturer in Law, London School of Economics
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"Kershaw takes seriously the aim of providing a theoretically grounded analysis, remaining accessible to students, with relevant questions to consider.
" - Chris Riley, Reader in Law, Durham University
"The book is very readable, and the focus on 'real-world' scenarios and illustrations adds a dimension that is often lacking.
" - Dr Sandra Frisby, Baker & McKenzie Associate Professor and Reader in Company and Commercial Law, University of Nottingham
"The material is put together in a very refreshing way with excellent commentary; the questions are invaluable for seminar-based work
" - Dr Paul Omar, Senior Lecturer, Sussex Law School
"If I could go back in time I would have definitely purchased the book; it would have assisted me greatly.
" - Jamie Cowan, undergraduate law student, University of Hull and Antwerpen
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PART I: INCORPORATION AND SEPARATE LEGAL PERSONALITY
1.: An introduction to the context and consequences of incorporation
2.: The entity doctrine
3.: The corporate constitution / The mechanics of the general meeting
4.: Corporate actions
PART II: CORPORATE CONTROL AND ACCOUNTABILITY
5.: The corporate agency problem
6.: The balance of power between the board, management, and the shareholder body
7.: Board composition and structure regulation
8.: Regulating directors' remuneration
9.: Introduction to directors' duties
10.: Regulating discretion I: acting in the company's interests
11.: Regulating discretion II: using corporate power for proper purposes
12.: Competence and the duty of care
13.: Regulating conflicts I: self-dealing
14.: Regulating conflicts II: corporate opportunities
15.: Enforcing directors' duties
16.: Minority shareholder protection
Web chapter A.: The market for corporate control: mergers and acquisitions (online chapter)
Web chapter B.: Disclosure, accounting and audit (online chapter)
PART III: CORPORATE FINANCE
17.: Shares
Web chapter C.: Issuing shares to the public (online chapter)
PART IV: CREDITOR PROTECTION
18.: Company law and creditor protection
19.: Regulating legal capital
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The specification in this catalogue, including without limitation price, format, extent, number of illustrations, and month of publication, was as accurate as possible at the time the catalogue was compiled. Occasionally, due to the nature of some contractual restrictions, we are unable to ship a specific product to a particular territory. Jacket images are provisional and liable to change before publication.
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