Markets and Democracy: The Illegitimacy of Corporate Law

66 Pages Posted: 9 Sep 2005

Abstract

Corporate law does not conform to ordinary democratic norms: unlike human citizens, corporations may decide which law will govern their most fundamental acts of self-governance. The corporate law corporations choose in turn influences the corporate goals and decision-making processes that determine what the corporation looks for in corporate law in a reflexive system independent of ordinary political processes. This system seems on its face to violate the most fundamental principle of popular sovereignty - all non-Delaware citizens of the United States are excluded from even formal participation in the process of determining American corporate law, and even Delaware citizens are reduced to a largely formalistic ratification role of results coerced, to a large extent, by the market for corporate control and the internal norms of a self-replicating system of law that has escaped from political control.

Corporate law scholars have devoted many pages to debating whether the surrender of corporate law to a market for corporate reincorporation generates substantively good or bad results, but there has been virtually no discussion of whether this process can be squared with the American commitment to self-governance. This Article aims to address that latter issue - with its obvious implications for other areas in which we, consciously or unconsciously, decide to subordinate politics to markets or vice versa.

Keywords: Corporate law, race to the bottom, democracy, federalism

JEL Classification: K23, G32, M14

Suggested Citation

Greenwood, Daniel J.H., Markets and Democracy: The Illegitimacy of Corporate Law. University of Missouri-Kansas City Law Review, Vol. 74, No. 1, p. 41, 2005, U of Utah Legal Studies Paper No. 05-29, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=747385

Daniel J.H. Greenwood (Contact Author)

Hofstra University College of Law ( email )

121 Hofstra University
Hempstead, NY 11549
United States
516-463-7013 (Phone)

HOME PAGE: http://law.hofstra.edu/greenwood

Do you have negative results from your research you’d like to share?

Paper statistics

Downloads
408
Abstract Views
2,659
Rank
133,271
PlumX Metrics