Preface - Sir Adrian Cadbury
Introduction: Corporate Governance - An Emerging Discipline? -
Thomas Clarke and Douglas Branson
PART ONE: ORIGINS AND DEVELOPMENT
The Evolution of Corporate Governance - R.I. (Bob) Tricker
In the Best Interest of the Corporation: Directors Duties in the
Wake of the Global Financial Crisis - Margaret M. Blair
Limited Liability Companies - Mark J. Loewenstein
Theoretical and Methodological Perspectives - Joan MacLeod
Heminway
PART TWO: MARKETS AND REGULATION
The Juridical Nature of the Firm - Simon Deakin
The Ascent of Shareholder Monitoring and Strategic Partnering: The
Dual Functions of the Corporate Board - Michael Useem
An Economic Analysis of Fair Value: A Critique of International
Financial Reporting Standards - Vincent Bignon, Yuri Biondi and
Xavier Ragot
PART THREE: BOARDS AND DIRECTORS: LEADERSHIP AND ACCOUNTABILITY
Boards and Board Effectiveness - Hans van Ees and Gerwin van der
Laan
Between the Letter and the Spirit: Defensive and Extensive Modes of
Compliance with the UK Code of Corporate Governance - John
Roberts
Boards′ Contribution to Strategy and Innovation - Alessandro
Zattoni and Amedeo Pugliese
Board Leadership and Value Creation: An Extended Team Production
Approach - Morten Huse and Jonas Gabrielsson
PART FOUR: BOARDS AND DIRECTORS: NEW CHALLENGES AND DIRECTIONS
Changing Scenes in and around the Boardroom: UK Corporate
Governance in Practice from 1989 to 2010 - Annie Pye, Szymon
Kaczmarek and Satomi Kimino
Board Evaluations: Contemporary Thinking and Practice - Gavin
Nicholson, Geoffrey Kiel and Jennifer Ann Tunny
Women and the Governance of Corporate Boards - Ruth Sealy and Sue
Vinnicombe
Diversity among Senior Executives and Board Directors - Sabina
Nielsen
PART FIVE: COMPETING GOVERNANCE REGIMES
Global Convergence in Corporate Governance: What a Difference 10
Years Make - Douglas M. Branson
A Bundle Perspective to Comparative Corporate Governance - Ruth V.
Aguilera, Kurt Desender and Luiz Ricardo Kabbach de Castro
Family-Owned Asian Business Groups and Corporate Governance - Marie
dela Rama
The Limitations of Corporate Governance Best Practices - Shann
Turnbull
PART SIX: DILEMMAS OF CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
Executive Compensation, Pay-for-Performance and the Institutions of
Executive Pay Setting - Martin J. Conyon and Simon I. Peck
In the Name of Shareholder Value: How Executive Pay and Stock
Buybacks are Damaging the US Economy - William Lazonick
Governance, Innovation and Finance - Ciaran Driver
The Governance and Regulation of Complex Conglomerates - John H.
Farrar
PART SEVEN: EMERGING ISSUES: GOVERNANCE AND SUSTAINABILITY
Markets, Regulation and Governance: The Causes of the Global
Financial Crisis - Thomas Clarke
Corporate Governance and the Financial Crisis: The Regulatory
Response - Alice Klettner
International Corporate Responsibility - Paul Redmond
Governance for Sustainability: Challenges for Theory and Practice -
Suzanne Benn
Professor Thomas Clarke is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts
(FRSA) and international corporate governance expert. He is a
former editor for governance and sustainability of the Journal of
Business Ethics a FTSE 50 journal. He is the editor of The Sage
Handbook of Corporate Governance, and an editor of The Oxford
Handbook of the Corporation. He is editor of the Cambridge
University Elements in Corporate Governance book series which
features works on corporate purpose and sustainability. He
contributed to the formulation of the OECD Principles of Corporate
Governance (1999).
He conducted the 2012 Census of Women in Leadership for the
Australian Government, launched by Governor-General Quentin Bryce.
He is the Inaugural Sir Adrian Cadbury Scholar of the International
Corporate Governance Network (ICGN) that represents $54 trillion
institutional investor funds. His current research interests
include the pivot towards corporate sustainability including
integrating targets and measures, progress towards decarbonisation,
and the circular economy.
He conducted pioneering research on cooperative enterprise at
Warwick University and later published the first critical works on
the process of privatization at St Andrews University in the UK. He
was awarded the first funded chair in Corporate Governance at Leeds
Business School in 1992, and became a foundation Professor of
Management at the China Europe International Business School
(CEIBS) in Shanghai, a joint venture of the European Foundation for
Management Development (EFMD) and Shanghai Jia Tong University. He
taught on Institute of Director programs in the UK and contributed
to the development of AICD programs in Australia where he is
Emeritus Professor at UTS Sydney.
He has held Visiting Professorships at the University of Paris,
Dauphine; University of Toulouse and ESC Lille, France; University
of Geneva, Switzerland; FGV Business School, Sao Paulo, Brazil; and
UAM Business School, Mexico City.
A group of distinguished scholars take up the familiar theme of
corporate governance, casting it in the light of a developing and
comprehensive complex of corporate, market and concomitant
regulating and economic changes that most of the world′s industries
have experienced since the eighties of the previous century. In
this timely handbook, they explore this critical issue with
distance and nuance. A broad spectrum of issues is discussed, which
cover the main subjects of discussion in academia, such as the need
for multiple methodological and multiple theoretical approaches in
order to study this domain and is at the same time of practical
relevance, because it deals with issues like board evaluation,
board effectiveness, innovation, strategy, the need for and
developments in regulation and the connection of corporate
governance to corporate social responsibility and sustainability.
This well-written book puts corporate governance developments
explicitly in their economic, global, and legal context and ends
with dilemmas policy makers and managers or executives are faced
with and finally discusses emerging issues of governance and
sustainability
Dr. T.J.B.M. Postma
Associate Prof. In Strategy, University Of Groningen [The SAGE
Handbook of Corporate Governance] is a mine of practical and
relevant thinking to be quarried by all with an interest in the
governance of corporations. It is monumental in scope, but it looks
to the past only as a guide to the future. In essence, the Handbook
represents a work in progress. It is a beginning not an end and is
the base from which the further development of corporate governance
will be chronicled
Sir Adrian Cadbury
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