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.
1,990 Working Papers
-
Law Series
Emergency Measures for Equity Trading: The Case Against Short-Selling Bans and Stock Exchange Shutdowns
Bocconi University, Department of Legal Studies
Università di Napoli Federico II -
-
Law Series
Agency, Authority, and Compliance
Fordham University School of Law -
Law Series
Regulatory Suspensions in Times of Crisis: The Challenges of Covid-19 and Thoughts for the Future
University College London - Faculty of Laws
University of Reading, School of LawAnd more (...)
-
Law Series
Shareholder Stewardship Enforcement
The Dickson Poon School of Law, King's College London
University of Exeter -
Finance Series
Marketplace Lending, Information Aggregation and Liquidity
London Business School
Saïd Business School, University of Oxford -
Finance Series
Sexism, Culture, and Firm Value: Evidence from the Harvey Weinstein Scandal and the #MeToo Movement
University of Utah
University of Alberta
London Business SchoolAnd more (...)
-
-
Law Series
-
Law Series
Power and Statistical Significance in Securities Fraud Litigation
University of Pennsylvania Law School -
Finance Series
-
Finance Series
The Advisory and Monitoring Roles of the Board - Evidence From Disruptive Events
Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore Milan
ETH ZurichSingapore-ETH centreAnd more (...)
-
Law Series
Should Corporations Have a Purpose?
University of Pennsylvania Law School
University of California, Berkeley School of Law -
Finance Series
Resiliency of Environmental and Social Stocks: An Analysis of the Exogenous COVID-19 Market Crash
Boston College
Haskayne School of Business, University of CalgaryAnd more (...)
-
-
Finance Series
ESG Shareholder Engagement and Downside Risk
University of Zurich and Swiss Finance InstituteAnd more (...)
-
Law Series
Codetermination: A Poor Fit for U.S. Corporations
The University of Texas School of Law
University of Oxford -
Finance Series