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.
2,000 Working Papers
-
Law Series
Regulating Financial Market Infrastructures
University of Genoa
Antonin Scalia Law School, George Mason University -
Finance Series
Taxes, Earnings Payout, and Payout Channel Choice
EMLYON Business School
Tilburg University -
Finance Series
Governance, Risk Management, and Risk-Taking in Banks
The Ohio State University -
Finance Series
Competition for Flow and Short-Termism in Activism
London School of Economics and Political Science
London School of Economics -
Finance Series
The Wall Street Walk when Blockholders Compete for Flows
London School of Economics -
Finance Series
Executive Remuneration and the Payout Decision
EMLYON Business School
Tilburg University -
Finance Series
-
Law Series
Comparing Insider Trading in the United States and in the European Union: History and Recent Developments
Paolo Baffi Center on Financial Regulation, Bocconi University Law Department -
Finance Series
Does Mandatory Shareholder Voting Prevent Bad Acquisitions?
Solvay Brussels School of Economics and Management, Université libre de Bruxelles
Luiss University, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, EIEF and Barcelona GSE
Bocconi University -
Finance Series
-
-
Finance Series
News Dissemination and Investor Attention
Swiss Finance Institute
Université Paris-Dauphine, PSL -
Law Series
-
Law Series
Disclosure and Financial Market Regulation
Bocconi University, Department of Legal Studies -
Law Series
Whose Trojan Horse? The Dynamics of Resistance against IFRS
Fordham University School of Law -
Law Series
Lift not the Painted Veil! To Whom are Directors? Duties Really Owed
Fordham University School of Law -
Law Series
Structural Corporate Degradation Due to Too-Big-to-Fail Finance
Harvard Law School -
Finance Series
Putting Integrity into Finance: A Purely Positive Approach
Graduate School of Business Administration, Harvard University