Adolph A. Berle and Gardiner C. Means with a new introduction by
Murray L. Weidenbaum and Mark Jensen (1991). The
Modern Corporation
and Private Property. (New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers,
380 p. (orig. pub. 1932)). Corporations--United States; Corporation
law--United States; Corporate governance--United States.
ed. Margaret M. Blair (1993).
The Deal Decade: What Takeovers
and Leveraged Buyouts Mean for Corporate Governance. (Washington,
DC: Brookings Institution, 390 p.). Consolidation and merger of
corporations; Corporate governance; Industrial management.
Margaret M. Blair (1995).
Ownership and Control: Rethinking
Corporate Governance for the Twenty-First Century. (Washington, DC:
Brookings Institute, 371 p.). Corporate governance--United States;
Corporate governance--Law and legislation--United States.
Alexander Borsch (2007). Global Pressure, National System: How
German Corporate Governance Is Changing. (Ithaca, NY: Cornell
University Press, 201 p.). Corporate governance--Germany;
Globalization--Germany. Impact of globalization,
regulatory changes on German corporate governance (widely seen as
prototype of stakeholder system); adaptation of selected features of
shareholder-based governance is possible; change will be limited to
those elements that do not destroy firms' competitive advantage.
William G. Bowen (1994).
Inside the Boardroom: Governance by
Directors and Trustees. (New York, NY: Wiley, 184 p.). Corporate
governance--United States; Directors of corporations--United States;
Trusts and trustees--United States.
Sir Adrian Cadbury (2002).
Corporate Governance and
Chairmanship: A Personal View. (New York, NY: Oxford University
Press, 259 p.). Corporate governance; Directors of corporations;
Boards of directors; Corporate governance--Great Britain; Directors of
corporations--Great Britain; Boards of directors--Great Britain.
William G. Capitman (1973).
Panic in the Boardroom; New Social
Realities Shake Old Corporate Structures. (Garden City, NY:
Doubleday, 300 p.). Industries--Social aspects--United States;
Industrial policy--United States; Industrial management--United
States.
Colin B. Carter and Jay W. Lorsch (2003).
Back to the Drawing
Board: Designing Corporate Boards for a Complex World. (Boston,
MA: Harvard Business School Press, 208 p.). Directors of corporations;
Corporate governance.
Neil W. Chamberlain (1973).
The Limits of Corporate
Responsibility. (New York, NY: Basic Books, 236 p.). Social
responsibility of business--United States.
Ram Charan (2005).
Boards that Deliver: Advancing Corporate
Governance from Compliance to Competitive Advantage. (San
Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass, 224 p.). Boards of directors; Corporate
governance.
Jonathan P. Charkham and Anne Simpson (1999).
Fair Shares : The
Future of Shareholder Power and Responsibility. (New York, NY:
Oxford University Press, 275 p.). Stock Ownership, Corporate
Governance, Investor Relations
Jonathan P. Charkham (1994).
Keeping Good Company: A Study of
Corporate Governance in Five Countries. (New York, NY: Oxford
University Press, 389 p.). Corporate Governance - Case Studies.
Gordon L. Clark and Dariusz Wojcik (2007).
The Geography of Finance: Corporate Governance in the Global
Marketplace. (New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 280 p.).
Halford Mackinder Professor of Geography, Professorial Fellow of the
Said Business School, Faculty Associate of the Institute of Ageing
(University of Oxford), Fellow of St Peter's College, Oxford; Research
Associate at the School of Geography and the Environment (University
of Oxford). International finance; Investments, Foreign; Corporate
governance. Transformation of European corporate
governance; response of corporate managers to interest of global
portfolio managers in transparent, accountable modes of corporate
governance
Jay A. Conger, Edward E. Lawler, III, David L. Finegold (2001).
Corporate Boards: Strategies for Adding Value at the Top. (San
Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass, 206 p.). Boards of directors; Corporate
governance; Strategic planning.
Eds. Paul Craig and Adam Tomkins (2006).
The Executive and Public Law: Power and Accountability in
Comparative Perspective. (New York, NY: Oxford University
Press, 350 p.). Professor of English Law (St. John's College, Oxford);
John Millar Professor of Public Law (University of Glasgow). Executive
power. Nature of executive power in a number of different legal systems.
Avinash K. Dixit (2004).
Lawlessness and Economics: Alternative Modes of Governance.
(Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 167 p.). John J. F. Sherrerd
'52 University Professor of Economics (Princeton University). Economic
policy; Corporate governance; Contracts; Right of property; Corporation
law; Business enterprises--Law and legislation; International
cooperation; Corporate governance--Developing countries;
Contracts--Developing countries; Right of property--Developing
countries; Corporation law--Developing countries; Business
enterprises--Law and legislation--Developing countries; Developing
countries--Economic policy. How can property
rights be protected, contracts be enforced in countries where rule of
law is ineffective or absent? How can firms from advanced market
economies do business in such circumstances?
Eds. Merritt B. Fox and Michael A. Heller (2006).
Corporate Governance Lessons from Transition Economy Reforms.
(Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 408 p.). Michael E.
Patterson Professor of Law, Co-Director of the Center for Law and
Economic Studies (Columbia Law School); Lawrence A. Wein Professor of
Real Estate Law (Columbia Law School). Corporate governance--Case
studies; Corporate governance--Law and legislation--Case studies.
What, if anything, do the reform experiences of
transition countries teach about corporate governance theory more
generally?
Bob Garratt (1997).
The Fish Rots from the Head: The Crisis in Our
Boardrooms: Developing the Crucial Skills of the Competent Director.
(New York, NY: HarperCollinsBusiness, 225 p.). Directors of
corporations; Corporate governance; Directors of corporations--Great
Britain; Corporate governance--Great Britain.
Kerstin Gross (2007).
Equity Ownership and Performance: An Empirical Study of German Traded
Companies. (New York, NY: Physica Verlag, 373 p.). Corporate
Governance; Financial Performance; Institutional Ownership; Managerial
Ownership. Effect of ownership structure on
company performance; four equations
system: performance, general ownership concentration, managerial
ownership, institutional ownership to trace different
observed ownership effects to their origin.
Peter Alexis Gourevitch and James J. Shinn (2005).
Political Power and Corporate Control: The New Global Politics of
Corporate Governance. (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University
Press, 384 p.). Professor of Political Science, Founding Dean at the
Graduate School of International Relations and Pacific Studies
(University of California, San Diego); Visiting Professor (Georgetown
University's School of Foreign Service). Corporate governance;
Corporations--Investor relations; Business and politics;
Corporations--Political activity; International finance.
Edward S. Herman (1981).
Corporate Control, Corporate Power.
(New York, NY: Cambridge University Press, 432 p.). Corporate
power--United States; Big business--United States; Industries--Social
aspects--United States; Industrial policy--United States.
Sanford M. Jacoby (2004).
The Embedded Corporation: Corporate Governance and Employment Relations
in Japan and the United States. (Princeton, NJ: Princeton
University Press. Howard Noble Professor of Management, Policy Studies,
and History (University of California, Los Angeles).
Management--Employee participation--Japan; Management--Employee
participation--United States; Corporate governance--Japan; Corporate
governance--United States; Personnel management--Japan; Personnel
management--United States; Capitalism--Japan; Capitalism--United States;
Comparative management.
Michael C. Jensen (2000).
A Theory of the Firm: Governance,
Residual Claims, and Organizational Forms. (Cambridge, MA: Harvard
University Press, 311 p.). Corporate governance; Industrial management;
Stockholders.
J. M. Juran and J. Keith Louden (1966).
The Corporate Director.
(New York, NY: American Management Association, 400 p.). Directors of
corporations--United States.
Andrew Kakabadse and Nada Kakabadse (2008).
Leading the Board: The Six Disciplines of World Class Chairmen.
(New York, NY: Palgrave Macmillan, 288 p.). Professor of International
Management Development at Cranfield University School of Management,
UK; Professor in Management and Business Research at Northampton
Business School, UK. Directors of corporations; Boards of directors;
Executive ability. What it takes to succeed as chairman leading modern
organization.
Jay W. Lorsch with Elizabeth MacIver (1989).
Pawns or
Potentates: The Reality of America's Corporate Boards. (Boston,
MA: Harvard Business School Press, 200 p.). Directors of
corporations--United States; Directors of corporations--Europe.
Paul W. MacAvoy, Ira M. Millstein (2003).
The Recurrent Crisis
in Corporate Governance. (New York, NY: Palgrave, 160 p.). Yale
School of Management; Weil Gotshal and Manges. Corporate governance.
Mairi Maclean, Charles Harvey, Jon Press; foreword by Adrrian
Cadbury. (2006).
Business Elites and Corporate Governance in France and the UK.
(New York, NY: Palgrave Macmillan, 256 p.). Professor of European
Business (Bristol Business School); and Professor of Business History
and Management (Strathclyde Business School); Visiting Professor of
Business History (Bristol Business School). Businesspeople--France;
Businesspeople--Great Britain; Elite (Social sciences)--France; Elite
(Social sciences)--Great Britain; Corporate governance--France;
Corporate governance--Great Britain. Exercise of
power and authority in two distinct national business systems.
Morton Mintz & Jerry S. Cohen (1976). Power, Inc.: Public and
Private Rulers and How To Make Them Accountable. (New York, NY:
Viking Press, 659 p.). Elite (Social sciences)--United States; Power
(Social sciences); Conflict of interests--United States; Political
ethics; Professional ethics.
Robert A.G. Monks and Neil Minow (1991).
Power and
Accountability. (New York, NY: HarperBusiness, 292 p.). Social
responsibility of business--United States; Corporate
governance--United States; Stockholders--United States.
--- (1996).
Watching the Watchers: Corporate Governance for the
21st Century. (Cambridge, MA: Blackwell, 340 p. (rev. 1995 ed. of
Corporate Governance)). Corporate governance--United States.
--- (2003).
Corporate Governance.
(Malden, MA: Blackwell Publishers, 464 p. [3rd ed.]). Corporate governance--United States.
Robert A.G. Monks (1998).
The Emperor's Nightingale: Restoring
the Integrity of the Corporation in the Age of Shareholder Activism.
(Reading. MA: Addison-Wesley, 283 p.). Corporate governance; Chaotic
behavior in systems; Self-organizing systems; Complexity (Philosophy).
--- (2007).
Corpocracy: How CEOs and the Business Roundtable Hijacked the World’s
Greatest Wealth Machine and How To Get It Back. (Hoboken, NJ:
Wiley, 272 p.). Founder of ISS, The Corporate Library, the LENS Fund,
and Governance for Owners, Former CEO in two industries and the
Director of Ten Publicly Traded Companies,. Corporations--Moral and
ethical aspects; Chief executive officers--Moral and ethical aspects;
Corporate governance. How corporations subvert public good for
their own benefit. Weak shareholder control over large corporations,
toll of unrestrained hunt for profits on environment, society.
Shareholder activism to reconcile competing interests.
Ed. Randall K. Morck (2005).
A History of Corporate Governance Around the World: Family Business
Groups to Professional Managers. (Chicago, IL: University of
Chicago Press, 687 p.). Stephen A. Jarislowsky Distinguished Chair in
Finance (University of Alberta). Corporate governance--History.
How capitalism differs in different settings and how those disparities
arose and shaped subsequent institutions.
Robert K. Mueller (1974).
Board Life: Realities of Being a
Corporate Director. (New York, NY: AMACOM, 193 p.). Directors of
Corporations
--- (1981).
The Incompleat Board, the Unfolding of Corporate
Governance. (Lexington, MA: Lexington Books, 283 p.). Directors of
Corporations, Leadership, Industrial Management
--- (1982).
Board Score : How to Judge Boardworthiness.
(Lexington, MA: Lexington Books, 229 p.). Directors of Corporations,
Organizational Effectiveness
--- (1984).
Behind the Boardroom Door. (New York, NY: Crown,
242 p.). Directors of Corporations
--- (1996).
Anchoring Points for Corporate Directors : Obeying
the Unenforceable. (Westport, CT: Quorum Books, 196 p.). Directors
of Corporations, Chief Executive Officers.
Alan Murray (2007).
Revolt in the Boardroom: The New Rules of Power in Corporate America.
(New York, NY: Collins, 272 p.). Assistant Managing Editor (Wall
Street Journal). Corporate governance--United States; Boards of
directors--United States; Chief executive officers--United States;
Power (Social sciences)--United States; Corporations--Social
aspects--United States. 2004 - leaders of 600 companies were asked to
leave; 2005 - number more than doubled; 2006 - reached 1,400
companies; story of three seminal board revolts (Hewlett-Packard drama, ousting
of Boeing's Harry Stonecipher, end of the reign of Hank Greenberg at
AIG); how job of chief executive has rapidly, permanently changed.
John Nofsinger, Kenneth Kim (2003).
Infectious Greed: Restoring
Confidence in America's Companies. (Upper Saddle River, NJ:
Prentice Hall/Financial Times, 277 p.). Corporate governance--United
States; Directors of corporations--United States; Corporations--United
States--Finance; Investments--United States; Stockholders--United
States.
Ed. Justin O'Brien (2005).
Governing the Corporation: Regulation and Corporate Governance in an
Age of Scandal and Global Markets. (Hoboken, NJ: Wiley, 394
p.). Senior Fellow at the Institute of Governance, Public Policy and
Social Research, Senior Fellow at the Institute of Governance,
Public Policy and Social Research (Queen's University, Belfast).
Corporate governance--Law and legislation;
Corporations--Accounting--Law and legislation; Corporations--Corrupt
practices; Corporate governance. Insights
of internationally recognized academics and practitioners involved in
the governance of global financial markets.
Mary O'Sullivan (2000).
Contests for Corporate Control:
Corporate Governance and Economic Performance in the United States and
Germany. (New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 332 p.).
Corporate governance--United States; Corporate governance--Germany;
Corporations--United States; Corporations--Germany; Industrial
management--United States; Industrial management--Germany; United
States--Economic conditions; Germany--Economic conditions.
James E. Post, Lee E. Preston, Sybille Sauter-Sachs (2002).
Redefining the Corporation: Stakeholder Management and Organizational
Wealth. (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 320 p.). Corporate
governance; Corporations--Investor relations; International business
enterprises; International trade; Globalization--Economic aspects;
Corporations.
Selected by Charles Preston (1982).
Can Board Chairmen Get
Measles?: Thirty Years of Great Cartoons from the Wall Street Journal.
(New York, NY: Crown, 128 p.). Business--Caricatures and cartoons;
Industries--Caricatures and cartoons; American wit and humor,
Pictorial.
Steven J. Root (1998).
Beyond COSO: Internal Control To Enhance
Corporate Governance. (New York, NY: Wiley, 340 p.). Internal
control, integrated framework; Industrial management--United States;
Auditing, Internal.
Hilary Rosenberg (1999).
A Traitor to His Class: Robert A.G.
Monks and the Battle to Change Corporate America. (New York, NY:
Wiley, 378 p.). Monks, Robert A. G., 1933-; Businessmen--United
States--Biography; Corporate governance--United States;
Stockholders--United States; Corporations--Investor relations--United
States; Social responsibility of business--United States.
Jordan A. Schwarz (1987).
Liberal: Adolf A. Berle and the Vision
of an American Era. (New York, NY: Free Press, 452 p.). Berle,
Adolf Augustus, 1895-1971; Statesmen--United States--Biography;
Economists--United States--Biography; New Deal, 1933-1939; United
States--Politics and government--1933-1945; United States--Politics
and government--1945-1989.
David Skeel (2004).
Icarus in the Boardroom: The Fundamental
Flaws in Corporate America and Where They Came From. (New York,
NY: Oxford University Press, 256 p.). S. Samuel Arsht Professor of
Corporate Law (U. of Pennsylvania). Corporate governance--United
States; Directors of corporations--United States; Industrial
management--United States.
Roy C. Smith and Ingo Walter (2005).
Governing the Modern Corporation: Capital Markets, Corporate Control
and Economic Performance. (New York, NY: Oxford University
Press, 320 p.). Professors, Stern School of Business (New York
University). Corporate governance; Capital market; Corporate
governance--United States; Capital market--United States.
All of the market's professional players carry
fiduciary obligations to their shareholders, clients, investors; must
be accountable.
Lalita S. Som (2006).
Stock Market Capitalization and Corporate Governance in India.
(New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 247 p.). Corporate
governance--India; Stock exchanges--India; Capital market--India;
Corporations--India--Finance. Corporate governance systems
across the world, specific corporate governance issues in emerging
markets like in India.
G.P. Stapledon (1996).
Institutional Shareholders and Corporate
Governance. (New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 376 p.).
Coprorate governance; Institutional investments;
Corporations--Investor relations; Corporate governance--Great Britain;
Institutional investments--Great Britain; Corporations--Investor
relations--Great Britain; Corporate governance--Australia;
Institutional investments--Australia; Corporations--Investor
relations--Australia.
Michael Useem (1993).
Executive Defense: Shareholder Power and
Corporate Reorganization. (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University
Press, 289 p.). Corporate governance--United States--Case studies;
Corporations--United States--Investor relations--Case studies;
Stockholders' voting--United States--Case studies; Stock
ownership--United States--Case studies; Directors of
corporations--United States--Case studies; Organizational
change--United States--Case studies; Industrial management--United
States--Case studies.
Ralph D. Ward (2000).
Improving Corporate Boards: The Boardroom
Insider Guidebook. (New York, NY: Wiley, 249 p.). Boards of
directors; Corporate governance.
--- (2003).
Saving the Corporate Board: Why Boards Fail and How To
Fix Them. (Hoboken, NJ: Wiley, 232 p.). Publisher, Boardroom
INSIDER. Boards of directors--United States; Directors of
corporations--United States; Corporate governance--United States.
J. Fred Weston, Kwang S. Chung, Juan A. Siu (2003).
Takeovers,
Restructuring, and Corporate Governance. (Upper Saddle River,
NJ: Prentice-Hall, 720 p. [4th ed.]). Consolidation and merger of
corporations--United States--Finance; Consolidation and merger of
corporations--United States--Management.
_________________________________________________
LINKS
CalPERS Corporate Library
http://calpers.thecorporatelibrary.net/Library.htm
A bibliographic database comprising much of the history of the
development of corporate governance, dating back in some instances to
the late 70's. This Library includes coverage of the major regulatory
and legal documents, academic papers, conference proceedings and major
news stories, nearly 14,000 individual items, in many cases fully
abstracted.
Center for Corporate
Governance (University of Delaware)
http://www.be.udel.edu/ccg/
Established to propose sensible and progressive changes in corporate
structure and management through education and interaction. It provides
a forum for business leaders, members of corporate boards, corporate
legal scholars and practitioners, jurists, economists, graduate and
undergraduate students and all other persons interested in corporate
governance issues to meet, to interact, to learn and to teach.
Corporate Governance: Enhancing Return on Capital
through Increased Accountability
http://Www.Corpgov.Net/) Since 1995 the Corporate Governance site has provided news,
internet links, and a small reference library. The site
serves as a discussion forum and NETwork for numerous
stakeholders who are leading authorities in explaining movements
and motives in the field; The editor, James McRitchie, openly promotes
active participation by shareholders in the governing of corporations
as a means of enhancing their ability to create wealth. Knowledge has
surpassed machines and the stored value of money itself, as the
driving force behind the world economy. In the recent past, companies
learned they could create better products more efficiently with the
full mental participation of their employees. Today, many are finding
that participation by shareholders also adds value. Venture
capitalists who are willing to invest idas as well as money are
outperforming the market. Join us in our attempt to enhance wealth
through increased accountability to investors by creating more
democratic forms of corporate governance and corporate monitoring.
The Corporate Library
http://www.thecorporatelibrary.com/
The Corporate Library is intended to serve as a central repository for
research, study and critical thinking about the nature of the modern
global corporation, with a special focus on corporate governance and
the relationship between company management, their boards and their
shareowners. All content on the site is open to visitors at no cost.
Due to copyright restrictions, however, some documents and other sites
referenced herein cannot yet be made directly available.
Kennesaw State University’s
Corporate Governance Center
http://ksumail.kennesaw.edu/~dhermans/cgcind~6.htm
A leading provider of corporate governance information to directors,
researchers, professors, advisors and other interested parties. Our
programs promote effective corporate governance for public, private and
nonprofit enterprises, with particular emphasis on audit committees and
entrepreneurial companies.
Robert A.G. Monks
http://www.ragm.com/
Assembly and dissemination of information and opinion about global
issues of corporate governance.
John L. Weinberg Center for
Corporate Governance
http://www.be.udel.edu/ccg/
Established in 2000 in the University of Delaware's Alfred Lerner
College of Business and Economics, the vision of the John L. Weinberg
Center for Corporate Governance is to propose progressive changes in
corporate structure and management through education and interaction.
The Center provides a forum for business leaders, members of corporate
boards, the legal community, academics, practitioners, graduate and
undergraduate students, and others interested in corporate governance
issues to meet, interact, learn and teach. Using the fully endowed Edgar
S. Woolard, Jr. Chair of Corporate Governance as the base for the
Center, our goal is to develop programs that will generate local,
national and even international interest.