Working Papers
The ECGI working paper series is a library of academic research papers produced by ECGI Research members consisting of highly qualified and renowned academics from across the globe. The papers focus on corporate governance topics in both law and finance fields.
1,988 Working Papers
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Finance Series
Investor Ideology
Imperial College London
University of Florida
Northwestern University - Kellogg School of ManagementAnd more (...)
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Finance Series
International Evidence on Firm Level Decisions in Response to the Crisis: Shareholders vs. Other Stakeholders
Imperial College Business School, Brevan Howard Centre
Reichman University / Cornell University -
Law Series
Blockchain Technology for Corporate Governance and Shareholder Activism
Tilburg University
Tilburg University -
Finance Series
Mergers and Acquisitions, Technological Change and Inequality
University of Massachusetts, Amherst
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
UNC -
Law Series
RPTs in SOEs: Tunneling, Propping, and Policy Channeling
Stanford Law School
Harvard Law School -
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Law Series
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Law Series
Germany's Reluctance to Regulate Related Party Transactions
Leibniz Institute SAFE, Goethe University Frankfurt, LawFin Center -
Finance Series
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Finance Series
"Since You're So Rich, You Must Be Really Smart": Talent and the Finance Wage Premium
Rotterdam School of Management
Stockholm School of Economics -
Law Series
The Effect of Minority Veto Rights on Controller Pay Tunneling
Harvard Law School
Tel Aviv University, Buchmann Faculty of Law
School of Business Administration, the Hebrew University of Jerusalem -
Finance Series
The Market for Non-Executive Directors: Does Acquisition Performance Influence Future Board Seats?
IE Business SchoolSchool of Business and Economics, Loughborough University -
Finance Series
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Law Series
Will Tenure Voting Give Corporate Managers Lifetime Tenure?
Emory University Goizueta Business School
Vanderbilt University Law School and Owen School of Management -
Finance Series
Do Institutional Investors Monitor their Large-Scale vs. Small-Scale Investments Differently? Evidence from the Say-On-Pay Vote
Hebrew University of Jerusalem
University of Maryland, Robert H. Smith School of Business -
Law Series
Be Careful What You Wish For: How Progress Engendered Regression in Related Party Transaction Regulation in Israel
Harry Radzyner Law School, Reichman University -
Law Series
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Finance Series