Interaction between competition law and corporate governance opening the 'black box'
Material type: TextSeries: Global competition law and economics policyPublication details: Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2019ISBN:- 9781108505185
- 343.421 23 TH-I
- K3850 .T475 2018
Item type | Home library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Electronic-Books | OPJGU Sonepat- Campus Main Library | E-Books Perpetual | 343.421 TH-I (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available (Restricted Access) | 701683 |
"Competition law and corporate governance: two distinct orders Antitrust is about markets; corporate [governance] is about firms. Antitrust is about competition; corporate [governance] is about cooperation. Antitrust regulates relations among firms; corporate [governance] governs relations within firms. Operating in distinct conceptual orders - that of the marketplace and that of the firm- competition law and corporate governance pursue different objectives. Competition law is oriented towards the defence of consumers' interests in the market while corporate governance rules are designed to protect the interests of shareholders. Competition law and corporate governance also constitute separate areas of academic inquiry across jurisdictions. The aim of this book is to fill a gap in the scholarship, by establishing systematic connections between competition law and corporate governance, regarding both substantive and enforcement issues of contemporary relevance"--
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