Megan Shaner, professor of law at the University of Oklahoma, joins the Business Scholarship Podcast to discuss her article The Corporate Chameleon. In this article, Shaner identifies the conceptual difficulty of identifying with certainty just who a corporation’s “officers” are. In response to this difficulty, she proposes a prototype-centered definition of “officer” to aid courts, firms, and potential officers in making that assessment.
Author: Andrew Jennings
Alexander Platt on Piggyback Securities Litigation
Alexander Platt, Climenko Fellow and lecturer on law at Harvard Law School, joins the Business Scholarship Podcast to discuss his forthcoming article Gatekeeping in the Dark: SEC Control over Private Securities Litigation Revisited. In this article, Platt considers the potential for SEC enforcement actions to catalyze “piggyback” litigation by private plaintiffs. To mitigate the potential for nonoptimal combinations of public plus private enforcement, he calls on the SEC to use its existing authority to account for potential “piggyback” effects in its own enforcement activities.
Brian Frye on Selling Art
Brian Frye, associate professor of law at the University of Kentucky, joins the Business Scholarship Podcast to discuss his forthcoming article Against Deaccessioning Rules. In this article, Frye questions the bases for professional ethical rules that prohibit charitable art museums from selling works of art. Going further, as a matter of corporate governance, he explores situations in which museum directors may have a fiduciary duty to sell art, especially if doing so means the difference for the institution’s survival.
Hilary Allen on Regulating Fintech
Hilary Allen, associate professor of law at American University, joins the Business Scholarship Podcast to discuss her essay Experimental Strategies for Regulating Fintech. In this essay, Allen reviews the challenges of regulating financial innovation and proposes that to keep up, agencies must themselves innovate and adopt new technologies to support their regulatory functions, a concept she dubs “SupTech.”
David Hoffman on Transactional Scripts
David Hoffman, professor of law at the University of Pennsylvania, joins the Business Scholarship Podcast to discuss his forthcoming article Transactional Scripts in Contract Stacks. In this article, Hoffman and co-author Shaanan Coheny take a critical view of “self-executing” contractual scripts, which they describe as still susceptible to long-standing contract problems and doctrines.
Nakita Cuttino on Early Wage Access
Nakita Cuttino, visiting assistant professor of law at Duke University, joins the Business Scholarship Podcast to discuss her forthcoming article The Rise of ‘Fringetech’: Regulatory Risks in Early Wage Access. In this article, Cuttino evaluates and considers regulatory challenges related to early-wage-access programs, a new generation of tech-enabled financial services targeted at low-income workers.
Josephine Nelson on Workplace Surveillance
Josephine Nelson, associate professor of law at Villanova University, joins the Business Scholarship Podcast to discuss her recent article Management Culture and Surveillance on critical issues and historical perspectives related to workplace surveillance.
Special Series on the 2020 Crisis
Ep. 1 (43): Yonah Freemak on the 2020 Crisis and Transit
March 23, 2020
Yonah Freemark, a PhD candidate in urban policy at MIT, joins the Business Scholarship Podcast to discuss the 2020 crisis, its impact on transit, and what should be done to preserve the economic role of transit.
Ep. 2 (45): David Zaring on the 2020 Crisis and Bank Regulators
April 7, 2020
David Zaring, professor of business studies and legal ethics at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, joins the Business Scholarship Podcast to discuss the 2020 crisis and the role of banking regulators in this crisis and crises more broadly.
Ep. 3 (47): Daniel Schwarcz on the 2020 Crisis and Insurance
April 16, 2020
Daniel Schwarcz, professor of law at the University of Minnesota, joins the Business Scholarship Podcast to discuss the 2020 crisis and issues related to insurance coverage and regulation.
Ep. 4 (48): J.W. Verret & Gregory Shill on the 2020 Crisis and Congressional Insider Trading
April 17, 2020
J.W. Verret, associate professor of law at George Mason University, and Gregory Shill, associate professor of law at the University of Iowa, join the Business Scholarship Podcast to discuss the 2020 crisis and congressional insider trading. Verret is the author of Applying Insider Trading Law to Congressmen, Government Officials, and the Political Intelligence Industry and Shill is the author of Congressional Securities Trading.
Check back for new installments in this special series!
Paul Mahoney on Soft Dollars
Paul Mahoney, distinguished professor of law at the University of Virginia, joins the Business Scholarship Podcast to discuss his forthcoming article Soft Dollars, Hard Choices: Reconciling US and EU Policies on Sell-Side Research. In this article, Mahoney discusses the quandary U.S. broker-dealers find themselves in with respect to the EU’s MiFID II rule banning the bundling of brokerage services and sell-side research, on one hand, and the U.S. regulatory schemes for broker-dealers and investment advisers, on the other. He proposes a U.S. regulatory approach that allows broker-dealers to remain compliant with the two jurisdictions’ contradictory rules.
Kevin Douglas on Michael Milken
Kevin Douglas, visiting assistant professor of law at George Mason University, joins the Business Scholarship Podcast to discuss his forthcoming article Michael Milken: A Case Study in America’s Moral Schism. In this article, Douglas explores the life and times of Michael Milken as a financier and financial innovator and uses the competing views on Milken’s work as a case study for how Americans understand, and disagree about, economic inequality and fairness.
Tom Lin on Financial AI
Tom Lin, professor of law at Temple University, joins the Business Scholarship Podcast to discuss his recent article Artificial Intelligence, Finance, and the Law. In this article, Lin explores the promises and opportunities of artificial intelligence in the financial sector, as well its risks and limitations, including bias, consumer harm, systemic risk, and financial accidents.
Verity Winship on Enforcement Networks
Verity Winship, professor of law at the University of Illinois, joins the Business Scholarship Podcast to discuss her new article Enforcement Networks. In this article, Winship presents an empirical network analysis of acknowledgments in SEC litigation and press releases. These acknowledgments shed light on how the SEC sources enforcement actions, including through referrals from the FBI, FINRA, and even small-town police departments. In presenting these findings, Winship demonstrates a method that can be extended for reaching deeper understanding of cross-agency interactions.
Jeremy Kress and Matthew Turk on Community-Bank Deregulation
Jeremy Kress, assistant professor of business law at the University of Michigan Ross School of Business, and Matthew Turk, assistant professor of business law and ethics at Indiana University Kelly School of Business, join the Business Scholarship Podcast to discuss their forthcoming article Too Many to Fail: Against Community Bank Deregulation. In their article Kress and Turk identify myths about community banking that have been used to justify that sector’s deregulation and explain why deregulation increases the risk of future community-bank failures.
Michael Cappucci on Proxy Advisors
Michael Cappucci, managing director for compliance and sustainable investing at Harvard Management Company, joins the Business Scholarship Podcast to discuss his new paper The Proxy War against Proxy Advisors. In this paper, Cappucci traces the growing influence of proxy advisors and addresses common criticisms about their business practices, accuracy, and role within U.S. corporate governance. He considers recent proposed regulations affecting the proxy-advisor industry and evaluates their likely effects on corporate governance and institutional shareholders and asset managers.
Letian Zhang on M&A and Workplace Equality
Letian Zhang, assistant professor of business administration at Harvard Business School, joins the Business Scholarship Podcast to discuss his working paper Shaking Things Up: Unintended Consequences of Firm Acquisitions on Racial and Gender Inequality. In this paper, Zhang uses EEOC data to examine the effects of mergers on racial and gender equality in acquired companies. He finds that although mergers may exacerbate inequality between high-skill and low-skill workers, they are associated with reductions in racial and gender inequality.
Citizens United at 10
On January 21, 2010, the Supreme Court issued its decision in Citizens United v. FEC. 558 U.S. 310. As sometimes happens when modest facts reach courts of last resort, Citizens United immediately eclipsed the controversy at hand. A case about a non-profit organization’s production of Hillary: The Movie, a little-seen documentary on then-Senator Hillary Clinton, became an early flashpoint in a decade of political conflict that coincided with, or that was perhaps fueled by, substantial increases in direct political spending by groups outside traditional campaign and party committees.
Late last year, Sarah Haan suggested marking on this show the ten-year anniversary of that momentous decision. That excellent suggestion led to this Citizens United at 10 podcast symposium. Of course, the seriatim-speakers-in-a-room structure of a traditional symposium required some adjusting for the podcast format. Instead, I pre-recorded seven interviews, to be released on this ten-year anniversary, with scholars who have spent part of the past decade working on Citizens United and its implications for corporate law, money in politics, and American democracy. Each guest brings a different set of insights and observations, and I am excited to share the full program with the listeners.
Political scientists Anna Harvey and Michael Rocca join to discuss empirical research and findings stemming from Citizens United. Five legal scholars–Kent Greenfield, Sarah Haan, Elizabeth Pollman, Ciara Torres-Spelliscy, and Anne Tucker–join to discuss the case’s corporate-law and constitutional consequences. I ask the legal scholars a common set of questions: (1) tell me about your work in this area over the last decade, (2) what’s surprised you or not surprised you in that time, and (3) what are you watching for or predicting over the next ten years? Although common themes, and sometimes areas of disagreement, emerge in the answers, each guest speaks from a unique vantage and is watching for different developments over the next decade.
These differences–especially for the final prospective question–and a modest two-hour runtime recommend a full listen to the symposium. The interviews are available below this foreword and on all major podcast services. As always, if you like what you hear, please consider subscribing to the podcast or sharing with others who might like it too. And if you have ideas for future episodes, let me know at andrew@andrewkjennings.com. Thank you for listening.
–Andrew Jennings, Creator/Host, Business Scholarship Podcast
Kent Greenfield
Kent Greenfield, professor of law at Boston College, joins the Business Scholarship Podcast Citizens United at 10 podcast symposium to discuss his work on Citizens United and the decision’s implications for corporate law, money in politics, and American democracy. Works discussed include Corporations Are People Too (And They Should Act Like It).
In addition to discussing his scholarship, Greenfield reflects on the tenth anniversary of Citizens United, including what’s surprised him, what hasn’t, and what he is watching over the next ten years.
Sarah Haan
Sarah Haan, associate professor of law at Washington & Lee University, joins the Business Scholarship Podcast Citizens United at 10 podcast symposium to discuss her work on Citizens United and the decision’s implications for corporate law, money in politics, and American democracy. Works discussed include Voter Primacy and Shareholder Proposal Settlements and the Private Ordering of Public Elections.
In addition to discussing her scholarship, Haan reflects on the tenth anniversary of Citizens United, including what’s surprised her, what hasn’t, and what she is watching over the next ten years.
Anna Harvey
Anna Harvey, professor of politics at New York University, joins the Business Scholarship Podcast Citizens United at 10 podcast symposium to discuss her article Does Money Have a Conservative Bias? Estimating the Causal Impact of Citizens United on State Legislative Preferences. In this article, Harvey and her co-author find that after Citizens United not only did states whose campaign-finance laws were affected by the decision see flips in control of legislative seats, but also that elected Republican legislators held more conservative policy preferences.
Elizabeth Pollman
Elizabeth Pollman, professor of law at the University of Pennsylvania, joins the Business Scholarship Podcast Citizens United at 10 podcast symposium to discuss her work on Citizens United and the decision’s implications for corporate law, money in politics, and American democracy. Works discussed include Citizens Not United: The Lack of Stockholder Voluntariness in Corporate Political Speech, A Corporate Right to Privacy, The Derivative Nature of Corporate Constitutional Rights, and Constitutionalizing Corporate Law.
In addition to discussing her scholarship, Pollman reflects on the tenth anniversary of Citizens United, including what’s surprised her, what hasn’t, and what she is watching over the next ten years.
Michael Rocca
Michael Rocca, associate professor of political science at the University of New Mexico, joins the Business Scholarship Podcast Citizens United at 10 podcast symposium to discuss his articles The Effects of Citizens United on Corporate Spending in the 2012 Presidential Election and The Impact of Citizens United on Large Corporations and Their Employees. In these articles, Rocca and his co-authors find that the Citizens United decision did not lead to observable increases in direct campaign spending by firms or their employees, although it did mark a substantial increase in expenditures by a small set of high-spending individuals.
Ciara Torres-Spelliscy
Ciara Torres-Spelliscy, professor of law at Stetson University, joins the Business Scholarship Podcast Citizens United at 10 podcast symposium to discuss her work on Citizens United and the decision’s implications for corporate law, money in politics, and American democracy. Works discussed include Corporate Citizen? An Argument for the Separation of Corporation and State and Political Brands.
In addition to discussing her scholarship, Torres-Spelliscy reflects on the tenth anniversary of Citizens United, including what’s surprised her, what hasn’t, and what she is watching over the next ten years.
Anne Tucker
Anne Tucker, associate professor of law at Georgia State University, joins the Business Scholarship Podcast Citizens United at 10 podcast symposium to discuss her work on Citizens United and the decision’s implications for corporate law, money in politics, and American democracy. Works discussed include Flawed Assumptions: A Corporate Law Analysis of Free Speech and Corporate Personhood in Citizens United, Rational Coercion: Citizens United and a Modern Day Prisoner’s Dilemma, The Citizen Shareholder: Modernizing the Agency Paradigm to Reflect How and Why a Majority of Americans Invest in the Market, and Locked In: The Competitive Disadvantage of Citizen Shareholders.
In addition to discussing her scholarship, Tucker reflects on the tenth anniversary of Citizens United, including what’s surprised her, what hasn’t, and what she is watching over the next ten years.
Elizabeth Pollman on Startup Governance
Elizabeth Pollman, professor of law at the University of Pennsylvania, joins the Business Scholarship Podcast to discuss her forthcoming article Startup Governance. In this article, Pollman offers a framework for understanding governance issues unique to startup firms, including complicated vertical and horizontal principal-agent conflicts that can accrete over multiple funding rounds.
Omari Scott Simmons on Executive-Search Firms and Governance
Omari Scott Simmons, professor of business law at Wake Forest University, joins the Business Scholarship Podcast to discuss his forthcoming article Forgotten Gatekeepers: Executive Search Firms and Corporate Governance. In this article, Simmons introduces the history, role, and practice of executive-search firms (ESFs), firms that help companies source and recruit senior executives and directors. He further makes the case that, similar to compensation consultants and proxy firms, ESFs are a significant player in a trend toward outsourcing corporate governance.
Menesh Patel on Merger Breakups
Menesh Patel, acting professor of law at UC Davis, joins the Business Scholarship Podcast to discuss his recent article Merger Breakups. In this article, Patel considers whether and when antitrust agencies should challenge consummated mergers that were previously reviewed and cleared through the Hart-Scott-Rodino process. This question in turn interacts with contemporary conversations about antitrust enforcement, particularly in the technology sector.
Jessica Erickson on Automating Securities Class-Action Settlements
Jessica Erickson, professor of law at the University of Richmond, joins the Business Scholarship Podcast to discuss her article Automating Securities Class Action Settlements. In the article, Erickson explores a contradiction in securities class-action settlements: although Civil Rule 23 defaults to opt-out class membership, the difficulty of identifying securities class members makes settlement administration effectively opt-in. She proposes two solutions for overcoming this problem: a market-based approach involving banks and brokers, and a regulatory approach using the SEC’s forthcoming consolidated audit trail.
Joseph Grundfest on Federal-Forum Provisions
Joseph Grundfest, professor of law and business at Stanford University, joins the Business Scholarship Podcast to discuss his recent article The Limits of Delaware Corporate Law: Internal Affairs, Federal Forum Provisions, and Sciabacucchi.
He explains that the Chancery Court’s Sciabacucchi decision erroneously held Securities Act claims to be external to a corporation’s governance, meaning that charters cannot require securities claims to be filed in federal, rather than state, court. He notes that this holding was not only wrong as a matter of Delaware law, but it also raises troubling federalism questions and could lead to higher D&O insurance premia.
Sarah Haan on Civil Rights and Shareholder Activism
Sarah Haan, associate professor of law at Washington and Lee University, joins the Business Scholarship Podcast to discuss her article Civil Rights and Shareholder Activism: SEC v. Medical Committee for Human Rights. Haan traces the civil-rights roots of shareholder activism and chronicles the legal history of SEC v. Medical Committee for Human Rights, a case stemming from activists’ opposition to Dow Chemical’s manufacture of napalm during the Vietnam War era. Although Medical Committee receded from memory after it was vacated as moot by the Supreme Court, Haan explains how it can inform contemporary debates over the meaning of corporate democracy.
Gina-Gail Fletcher on Engineered Credit-Default Swaps
Gina-Gail Fletcher, associate professor at Indiana University Maurer School of Law, joins the Business Scholarship Podcast to discuss her forthcoming article Engineered Credit Default Swaps: Innovative or Manipulative?. Fletcher’s article examines the phenomenon of engineered credit-default-swap transactions. In these transactions, CDS buyers or sellers induce borrowers either to default or avoid default on debt referenced by CDS contracts, thus allowing them to directly affect the values of the contracts. Fletcher considers the costs and benefits of this controversial practice and sketches possible regulatory and market responses to it.
Gregory Shill on Driving, Motordom, and Political Economy
Gregory Shill, associate professor of law at the University of Iowa, joins the Business Scholarship Podcast to discuss his article Should Law Subsidize Driving?. In this article and a companion piece in The Atlantic, Shill explores how law and policy subsidize driving as the dominant form of transportation.
He explains that this subsidization hurts everyone in terms of auto-related deaths, negative health effects, and quality of life, but that these costs are disproportionately borne by people of color, the disabled, and senior citizens. He offers hope, however, that rather than being preordained, these effects are the result of changeable policy choices.
Rory Van Loo on Regulatory Monitors
Rory Van Loo, associate professor of law at Boston University, joins the Business Scholarship Podcast to discuss his recent article Regulatory Monitors: Policing Firms in the Compliance Era. He explains that regulatory agencies are not solely driven by enforcement and regulatory attorneys. Rather, large workforces of inspectors, examiners, engineers, and other professionals monitor firms day-to-day and in large part drive decisions around when and how the law is enforced and how regulation is developed.