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.
1,997 Working Papers
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Finance Series
The Benefits of Access - Evidence from Private Meetings with Portfolio Firms
Solvay Brussels School of Economics and Management, Université libre de Bruxelles
London Business School
Bocconi University -
Finance Series
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Law Series
Corporate Groups: Corporate Law, Private Contracting and Equal Ownership
Universidad Autónoma de Madrid
Department of Business and Finance, Universidad Carlos III de Madrid -
Finance Series
Merger-Driven Listing Dynamics
Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth -
Finance Series
On a Stakeholder Model of Corporate Governance
University of Washington -
Law Series
London allowing dual class Premium listings: A Swedish commentary
Stockholm School of Economics
University of Gothenburg -
Law Series
The EU Sustainable Governance Consultation and the Missing Link to Soft Law
University of Genoa
University of Genoa - Department of Law
University of Genoa -
Finance Series
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Law Series
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Law Series
Federal Corporate Law and the Business of Banking
Columbia Law School
Vanderbilt University Law School -
Finance Series
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Law Series
Internal Investigations, Whistleblowing and External Monitoring: Comparative Experiences, Economic Insights, Findings from Corporate Practice
Max Planck Institute for Comparative and International Private Law -
Law Series
Bankruptcy Shopping: Domestic Venue Races and Global Forum Wars
The University of Chicago Law School -
Law Series
Bankruptcy & Bailouts; Subsidies & Stimulus: The Government Toolset for Responding to Market Distress
The University of Chicago Law School -
Law Series
Letting Companies Choose between Board Models: An Empirical Analysis of Country Variations
Fordham University School of Law
European University Institute -
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Law Series
Towards a Principled Approach for Bailouts of COVID-distressed Critical/Systemic Firms
University of Oxford
University of Oxford