Re: The corporation — re-thinking, re-forming, re-imagining

Article


Peters, Timothy D. and Goding, Vincent. 2022. "Re: The corporation — re-thinking, re-forming, re-imagining." Australian Journal of Corporate Law. 38 (1), pp. 1-4.
Article Title

Re: The corporation — re-thinking, re-forming, re-imagining

ERA Journal ID37186
Article CategoryArticle
AuthorsPeters, Timothy D. and Goding, Vincent
Journal TitleAustralian Journal of Corporate Law
Journal Citation38 (1), pp. 1-4
Number of Pages4
Year2022
PublisherLexisNexis Butterworths
Place of PublicationAustralia
ISSN1037-4124
Web Address (URL)https://search.informit.org/doi/10.3316/agispt.20221222080503
AbstractThe 2022 Annual Conference of the Society of Corporate Law Academics was held on Sunday 3 July to Tuesday 5 July 2022 and hosted by the School of Law and Society, University of the Sunshine Coast, Sippy Downs, Queensland. This year’s conference, the first under the association’s new name emphasising its commitment to leading scholarship in corporate law across Australia, New Zealand and the region, was entitled 'Re: The corporation — re-thinking, re-forming, re-imagining'. It was, in part, a response to the plethora of calls in recent years to re-think, re-theorise, re-construct, re-configure, re-define, re-conceptualise, re-purpose, re-imagine and re-invent the corporation, corporate governance and corporate law. It invited papers to critically, conceptually and pragmatically engage with these calls, recognising that in each the prefix ‘re’ encapsulates a return, a do-over, a need to perform a task again, which extends at times to a process of literally re-forming the corporate form, imagining alternative possibilities and thinking it anew. A cross-section of papers, along with a review of a book launched at the conference, has been published in this special issue. These contributions re-imagine corporate harms and corporate criminal culpability, revisit the conceptual foundations of insider trading laws, re-think the dominance of the corporation by analysing cooperatives and Indigenous corporations and re-theorise the recognition of foreign corporations (and pseudo-corporations) and the emergence of the modern company.
Contains Sensitive ContentDoes not contain sensitive content
ANZSRC Field of Research 2020480103. Corporations and associations law
350702. Corporate social responsibility
480199. Commercial law not elsewhere classified
Public NotesFiles associated with this item cannot be displayed due to copyright restrictions.
Byline AffiliationsUniversity of the Sunshine Coast
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