Academic literature on the topic '180109 Corporations and Associations Law'

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Journal articles on the topic "180109 Corporations and Associations Law"

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Egorova, M. A., and I. A. Samoilov. "The impact of antitrust law on the formation and activities of corporate associations." Courier of Kutafin Moscow State Law University (MSAL)), no. 7 (September 23, 2022): 66–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.17803/2311-5998.2022.95.7.066-076.

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The growth of the scale of business in the modern world leads to the inevitable processes of concentration of capital, which, in turn, strengthens the position of large corporate associations in various industry and geographical markets. Large corporations and their associations are becoming major players in various markets. As a result, a significant number of small companies are taken over or squeezed out of the markets by large players. The article presents current trends in the development of antimonopoly regulation in relation to corporations, provides examples of the most high-profile litigation relating to violations of competition law. The authors analyze the current state of the Russian antimonopoly legislation in terms of the definition of corporate associations, highlight the directions of development in relation to corporate associations. The importance of developing a system of internal compliance with the requirements of the antimonopoly legislation is noted, and the positive and negative aspects of the voluntariness of the introduction of such a system are also indicated. It is proposed that antimonopoly compliance be mandatory for large corporations. Mitigation of liability if the corporate association has antimonopoly compliance,
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Campbell, Bruce A. "Social Federalism: The Constitutional Position of Nonprofit Corporations in Nineteenth-Century America." Law and History Review 8, no. 2 (1990): 149–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/743990.

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The importance of voluntary associations is apparent to all who study the development of American society in the nineteenth century. Observations made by the perceptive nineteenth-century traveler Alexis de Tocqueville have become an obligatory cliché in historical writing on the subject:Americans of all ages, all conditions, and all dispositions constantly form associations. They have not only commercial and manufacturing companies,… but associations of a thousand other kinds, religious, moral, serious, futile, general or restricted, enormous or diminutive. The Americans make associations to give entertainments, to found seminaries, to build inns, to construct churches, to diffuse books, to send missionaries to the antipodes; in this manner they found hospitals, prisons, and schools. If it is proposed to inculcate some truth or to foster some feeling by the encouragement of a great example, they form a society. Wherever at the head of some new undertaking you see the government in France, or a man of rank in England, in the United States you will be sure to find an association.
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Blom, Hans, and Mark Somos. "Public-Private Concord through Divided Sovereignty: Reframing societas for International Law." Journal of the History of International Law / Revue d’histoire du droit international 22, no. 4 (October 27, 2020): 565–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15718050-12340170.

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Abstract Grotius is the father of modern international law. The indivisibility of sovereignty was the sine qua non of early-modern conceptual innovation in law. Both statements are axiomatic in the mainstream literature of the last two centuries. Both are profoundly and interestingly wrong. This article shows that Grotius’ systematisation of public and international law involved defining corporations as potentially (and the VOC actually) integral to reason of state, and able to bear and exercise marks of sovereignty under certain conditions. For Grotius, some corporations were not subsumed under the state’s legal authority, nor were they hybrid ‘company-states’. Instead, states and such corporations, able and forced to cooperate, fell under dovetailing natural, international, and municipal systems of law. The article reexamines Grotius’ notion of international trade, public debt, private corporation, and public and private war through the reassembled prism of these dovetailing laws and the category of societas that underpins Grotian associations. It is argued that although formulated around the new East India trade, the actual reality of legal pluralism was available to Grotius in the Dutch trade experience of the sixteenth century.
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Filatova, U. B., and O. V. Gorbach. "Associations and Unions in the System of Non-profit Corporate Organizations in Russian Law." Siberian Law Herald 1 (2021): 45–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.26516/2071-8136.2021.1.45.

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The article deals with the corporate nature of associations and unions. Problems of conceptual apparatus, namely such definitions as “corporation”, “corporate organization”, “non-profit corporate organization”, “association (union)”, “corporate rights” are analysed in the article. This leads to the conclusion that it is difficult to identify the necessary and sufficient corporate characteristics, whether associations and unions are full-fledged corporate organizations or can be considered as quasi-corporations. These issues are considered in the light of the non-profit nature of the corporation, in view of the purposes for which it was established, of its public or public functions.
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Jovanov, Rastko. "Mimesis, law, struggle. A contribution to social ontology." Filozofija i drustvo 26, no. 4 (2015): 917–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.2298/fid1504917j.

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In this text, I begin from a brief presentation of Edith Stein's neglected theory of collective identity in contemporary social ontology, in order to, building on and resisting her conclusions, elaborate a new differentiation of various forms of collective identity. The thesis is that there are only three basic forms of communal living and action which have a feeling of collective belonging and solidarity, that is, collective identity: the masses, associations (corporations) and communities. I go on to further develop their respective particularities through the use of the terms of mimesis, (established) law and struggle, and by using certain insights from Hegel regarding the nature of ?objective spirit?.
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CIEPLEY, DAVID. "Beyond Public and Private: Toward a Political Theory of the Corporation." American Political Science Review 107, no. 1 (January 30, 2013): 139–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003055412000536.

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This article challenges the liberal, contractual theory of the corporation and argues for replacing it with a political theory of the corporation. Corporations are government-like in their powers, and government grants them both their external “personhood” and their internal governing authority. They are thus not simply private. Yet they are privately organized and financed and therefore not simply public. Corporations transgress all the basic dichotomies that structure liberal treatments of law, economics, and politics: public/private, government/market, privilege/equality, and status/contract. They are “franchise governments” that cannot be satisfactorily assimilated to liberalism. The liberal effort to assimilate them, treating them as contractually constituted associations of private property owners, endows them with rights they ought not have, exacerbates their irresponsibility, and compromises their principal public benefit of generating long-term growth. Instead, corporations need to be placed in a distinct category—neither public nor private, but “corporate”—to be regulated by distinct rules and norms.
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Kostruba, Anatoliy. "Integrated Structures of Corporations: Ukrainian Legal Reality." Teisė 124 (September 28, 2022): 125–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.15388/teise.2022.124.10.

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The article is devoted to the study of legal nature of the mechanism for association of legal entities. Such associations of legal entities are realized in order to attract not only capital and other production resources, including labor, but also in order to satisfy nonproperty interests.Legal capacity of legal entities in the process of their merger is analyzed, based on what – statutory or contractual – association of corporations is determined. The statutory association does not lead to the creation of another fiction other than a legal entity, due to which it is ensured through its inherent organizational legal forms. The contractual association does not require the formation of a new legal entity (concern, consortium, association (union), syndicate, conglomerate, cartel, pool).In the event of such consolidation of legal entities, the contractual structure of a simple company or other joint activity is formed, formally close to such person at law as a legal entity. The difference between the above procedure of merging from the first option lies in the degree of autonomy of the members from each other, as well as in the expected result of such merger.
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Xu, Ya-wen, and Qian Cheng. "Viewing the Labor Law Reform in China From a Perspective of Legal Globalization." NAVEIÑ REET: Nordic Journal of Law and Social Research, no. 7 (November 2, 2018): 35–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.7146/nnjlsr.v0i7.111014.

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After the cold war, the trends of legal globalization became more and more obvious. People’s Republic of China (PRC) began its connection with the international community and the global market, and its legal reform after the launch of the “reform and opening-up” policy. By examining China’s labor law reform, we can see how legal globalization has influenced China’s legal system. China introduced and transplanted many institutions, terms of ILO conventions during its labor law reform. It also accepted many principles and conceptions of ILO conventions in its labor law and constitutional law, which would shape China’s labor law reform. Multinational corporations (MNC) and transnational civil society organizations (TCSO) influenced Chinese labor law reform through lobbying, advocacy, public education, and litigations. Informal norms such as Corporate Social Responsibility standards developed by MNCs and TSCOs also inspired Chinese legislators to improve China’s labor law and Chinese SCOs or business associations to develop labor standards to fill the gaps in China’s labor law and regulations. In conclusion, in the age of legal globalization, the labor law reform in China is a kind of legal transplantation. International norms, actions by multinational corporations and transnational civil society, and their informal norms together constitute the force which promotes the transplantation and the reform of China’s legal system. Key Words: legal globalization, global governance, labor law, law reform
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Liang, Xiaobei, Xiaojuan Hu, and Hu Meng. "Truly Sustainability or Hypocrisy: The Effects of Corporate Sustainable Orientation on Consumers’ Quality Perception and Trust Based on Evidence from China." Sustainability 12, no. 7 (March 31, 2020): 2735. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su12072735.

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Sustainable initiatives have been widely fulfilled by corporations, which can acquire better reputations by performing environmental, social, and economic responsibilities. However, if a corporation’s propaganda about sustainable orientation is contrary to the actual action, or even does not have a clear orientation, then it may also fall into the reputation of hypocrisy. In this study, from the perspective of consumer behavior and based on the moral responsibility theory of corporate sustainability, we identify six types of sustainable corporations by their orientations toward sustainability, including value, goals, and structure. We empirically examine their direct effects on consumers’ sustainable quality perception and trust, as well as the moderating effects of corporate social responsibility associations and consumer–corporation identity. Data are collected in China; 203 adults participated in the survey. The results reveal that the types of sustainable goals and structure have a significant effect on consumers’ sustainable quality perception and trust. Furthermore, consumers’ perception is also positively associated with their trust in a corporation. Moreover, the consumer–corporation identity negatively moderates the relationship between perception and trust. These findings also bring theoretical and practical insights for governments and corporations.
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Balcerek, Marta. "Ustrój prawny samorządu rolniczego w Polsce i RFN. Studium porównawcze." Przegląd Politologiczny, no. 1 (November 2, 2018): 115–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.14746/pp.2012.17.1.9.

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Two models of farmers’ institutions have developed in Europe: a) the French model, resulting from the decentralization of public administration and taking the form of agricultural chambers, or corporations under public law, administratively imposing obligatory membership, and b) the Anglo-Saxon model of voluntary agricultural associations with no administrative power. The purpose of this paper is to compare the first model, using the example of the North Rhine-Westphalia Chamber of Agriculture and the Wielkopolska Chamber of Agriculture. The differences are presented in terms of their respective legal structures and the tasks each chamber performs in the state administration of FRG and Poland.
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Books on the topic "180109 Corporations and Associations Law"

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E, Stewart Martha, ed. Nonprofit corporations, organizations & associations. 6th ed. Englewood Cliffs, N.J: Prentice Hall, 1994.

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Baxt, R. Corporations and associations: Cases and materials. 9th ed. Sydney: LexisNexis Butterworths, 2003.

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John, Gooley. Corporations and associations: Law principles and issues. Riverwood, N.S.W: Magna Carta Press, 1992.

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John, Gooley. Corporations and associations law: Principles and issues. 4th ed. Sydney: Butterworths, 1999.

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Phelan, Marilyn E. Nonprofit enterprises: Corporations, trusts, and associations. [St. Paul]: West Group, 2000.

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Oleck, Howard Leoner. Nonprofit corporations, organizations, and associations. 5th ed. Englewood Cliffs, N.J: Prentice-Hall, 1988.

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E, Snyder James. Snyder North Carolina corporation law and practice: Including business corporations, nonprofit corporations, professional corporations, cooperative associations, marketing associations, actions by and against corporations, limited partnerships. Norcross, GA (P.O. Box 7500, Norcross 30091-7500): Harrison Co., 1992.

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1949-, Thompson Robert B., ed. Corporations and other business associations: Cases and materials. 6th ed. New York, NY: Aspen Publishers, 2010.

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O'Kelley, Charles R. Corporations and other business associations: Cases and materials. 6th ed. New York, NY: Aspen Publishers, 2010.

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E, Snyder James. Snyder North Carolina corporation law and practice: Including business corporations, nonprofit corporations, professional corporations, cooperative associations, marketing associations, actions by and against corporations, limited partnerships, limited liability companies. 2nd ed. Norcross, GA (3110 Crossing Park, Norcross 30071-1367): Harrison Co., 1995.

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Book chapters on the topic "180109 Corporations and Associations Law"

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Peter, Henry, and Vincent Pfammatter. "Social Enterprises and Benefit Corporations in Switzerland." In The International Handbook of Social Enterprise Law, 831–60. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-14216-1_40.

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AbstractMany countries around the world have introduced specific legal forms to meet the needs of benefit corporations and social enterprises. Unlike these jurisdictions, Switzerland’s legislator has decided not to provide for such a dedicated legal structure. And this stance is unlikely to evolve since the Federal Council stated in 2018 that it did not intend to encourage the creation of a new legal structure for benefit corporations or social enterprises, although it supported private initiatives in this sector, such as the B corp movement.In this contribution, the authors analyze the social enterprise, benefit corporation and B corp movement in Switzerland and how such ventures may fit into existing legal structures, given the absence of any specific legal form. To this end, they will review the legal contours of corporations (LLC or LTD), cooperatives, and charities, namely, associations and foundations, and the possibilities that they offer for social enterprises and benefit corporations.Finally, the authors also address tax-related aspects, as well as past and current legislative initiatives intended to make Swiss law evolve towards a legal structure that would be dedicated to social enterprises or benefit corporations.
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Fleckner, Andreas Martin. "Roman Business Associations." In Roman Law and Economics, 233–72. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198787204.003.0009.

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Roman businessmen eager to launch a joint business venture could choose among three legal forms: the societas, the societas publicanorum, and the peculium of a commonly held slave. None of these forms led to large capital associations, let alone business corporations with publicly traded shares. The high level of instability is one of the key explanations: under Roman law, it was virtually impossible to commit capital for the long term and finance capital-intensive enterprises. The societas was inevitably liquidated following numerous dissolution events; its members could withdraw their money at any time; and private creditors were not barred from seizing common assets. The peculium was even more unstable: In addition to the dissolution events of the societas, the joint venture came to an end and all peculium items reverted back to the masters when the commonly held slave died. While the societas publicanorum developed into a more stable institution over time, during the same period, its business almost disappeared as state authorities stopped putting capital-intensive projects out to tender. How can a modern reader make sense of the picture that emerges from the sources? The present chapter suggests that reservations in the social and political setting, rather than economic factors or oddities of Roman legal doctrine, caused business associations to remain small. This is an important lesson from history, both for the theory of the firm and for the role that law plays in it.
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Ormerod, David, and Karl Laird. "25. Liability of corporations." In Smith, Hogan, & Ormerod's Text, Cases, & Materials on Criminal Law, 770–800. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/he/9780198831945.003.0025.

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This chapter discusses the ways in which organizations and their members might be held liable in criminal law. It covers personal liability of individuals within an organization; vicarious liability; corporate liability: by breaching a statutory duty imposed on the organization, by committing strict liability offences, by being liable for the acts of individuals under the identification doctrine, and the specific statutory liability of organizations for homicide under the Corporate Manslaughter and Corporate Homicide Act 2007; and liability of unincorporated associations.
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Ormerod, David, and Karl Laird. "26. Liability of corporations." In Smith, Hogan, & Ormerod's Text, Cases, & Materials on Criminal Law. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/he/9780198788713.003.0026.

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This chapter discusses the ways in which organizations and their members might be held liable in criminal law. It covers personal liability of individuals within an organization; vicarious liability; corporate liability: by breaching a statutory duty imposed on the organization, by committing strict liability offences, by being liable for the acts of individuals under the identification doctrine, and the specific statutory liability of organizations for homicide under the Corporate Manslaughter and Corporate Homicide Act 2007; and liability of unincorporated associations.
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Beatson, Jack, Andrew Burrows, and John Cartwright. "7. Incapacity." In Anson's Law of Contract, 233–64. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/he/9780198829973.003.0007.

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This chapter discusses the grounds of contractual incapacity. It considers contracts made with the Crown and public authorities; corporations and incorporated associations; minors; and persons lacking mental capacity and drunken persons.
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Conference papers on the topic "180109 Corporations and Associations Law"

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"Australian Corporations and Business Associations Law—A Critical Analysis of Insolvent Trading." In 2018 2nd International Conference on Innovations in Economic Management and Social Science. Clausius Scientific Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.23977/iemss.2018.91408.

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