Rationality in Company Law: Essays in Honour of DD Prentice
By (Author) John Armour
Edited by Jennifer Payne
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Hart Publishing
30th January 2009
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Bankruptcy and insolvency
346.066
Hardback
402
Width 156mm, Height 234mm, Spine 31mm
This collection of essays is a festschrift to honour Professor Dan Prentice who retired in 2008 from the Allen & Overy Professorship of Company Law in the University of Oxford. Dan Prentice has been deeply involved in corporate law from all perspectives: as a scholar, teacher, law reformer and practising member of Erskine Chambers. His interests have covered the full range of corporate law, finance and insolvency. The occasion of his retirement from his Professorship has afforded a number of leading corporate law experts from around the world, many of whom are his former students and colleagues, an opportunity to address some of the most important issues in corporate law today, in his honour. Corporate law has always been a fast-moving area, but the present pace of change seems quicker than ever. The Companies Act 2006, by some way the longest piece of legislation ever passed by the UK Parliament, is reshaping the landscape of domestic company law. At the same time, legislative and judicial developments at the European level in corporate and securities law are of unprecedented importance for corporate lawyers based in the UK. This outstanding series of papers addresses a number of the most important issues currently facing the subject, including the impact of the new Companies Act on directors' duties, shareholder litigation and capital maintenance; aspects of insolvency and banking regulation, the Capital Requirements Directive, and a new Convention on Intermediated securities. It will be essential reading for all those interested in the field.
The readers will find this book rich in scholarship and of practical use in some instances. The essays in this collection show by proxy Professor Prentice's high academic standard and, like Professor Prentice himself make a great contribution to company law scholarship. Look Chan Ho Law Quarterly Review April 2010, Volume 126
John Armour is Lovells Professor of Law and Finance in the Faculty of Law, University of Oxford, and a Fellow of Oriel College. Jennifer Payne is Professor of Corporate Finance Law at the University of Oxford, and a Fellow and Tutor of Merton College, Oxford.