Opening at $25 1/2 is Big Firm U.S.A.: Why America May Eventually have a Publicly Traded Law Firm, And Why Law Firms can Succeed Without Going Public.
The Journal of Corporation Law 2008, Fall, 34, 1
-
- $5.99
-
- $5.99
Publisher Description
1. INTRODUCTION As you brew your coffee and sit down to read the Wall Street Journal before heading to work, you look for your major stock holdings. After all, you have never been keen on waiting to retire at age 65. Thankfully, you see your two newest stocks are performing well; Latham & Watkins is up, as is Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz. While this scenario is not yet a reality, the chance of public ownership of American law firms is rising dramatically. This is due to the world's first publicly traded. (1) law firm in Australia, and the United Kingdom's recently enacted Legal Services Act--which allows for public ownership of law firms. (2)
Corporate Power in Civil Society
2001
Ownership, Limited: Reconciling Traditional and Progressive Corporate Law Via an Aristotelian Understanding of Ownership.
2008
Corporate Governance
2017
The Fetishization of Independence.
2008
State Action Immunity, Municipalities, And the Unique Case of Eminent Domain.
2008
Putting the Cart Before the Horse: Determining Economic Substance Independent of the Language of the Code.
2010
Series Llcs: The Asset Protection Dream Machines? (Limited Liability Companies)
2010
The Evolution of Debt: Covenants, The Credit Market, And Corporate Governance.
2009
Liability for Fairness Opinions Under Delaware Law.
2011
Can Corporate Monitorships Improve Corporate Compliance?
2009
What Fiduciary Duties should Apply to the LLC Manager After More Than a Decade of Experimentation?(Limited Liability Company)
2007
Shareholder Primacy's Corporatist Origins: Adolf Berle and the Modern Corporation.
2008