| 1991 - 436 pages
...that moment the passive property right of today must yield before the larger interests of society. Should the corporate leaders, for example, set forth...of business, all of which would divert a portion of the profits from the owners of passive property, and should the community generally accept such a scheme... | |
| Herbert Hovenkamp - 2009 - 470 pages
...to be subjected to "the paramount interests of the community." These concerns legitimately included "fair wages, security to employees, reasonable service to their public, and stabilization of business. . . ." That view was of course anathema to the classical theory of the corporation, which had sought... | |
| Gregory S. Alexander - 2008 - 496 pages
...community had a legitimate claim to have other groups' interests protected as well. These included "fair wages, security to employees, reasonable service to their public, and stabilization of business." 162 A program along those lines might well shift some corporate profits from shareholders to employees... | |
| Gregory S. Alexander - 1999 - 500 pages
...community had a legitimate claim to have other groups' interests protected as well. These included "fair wages, security to employees, reasonable service to their public, and stabilization of business."162 A program along those lines might well shift some corporate profits from shareholders... | |
| William Lazonick - 2002 - 456 pages
...that moment the passive property right of today must yield before the larger interests of society. Should the corporate leaders, for example, set forth...of business, all of which would divert a portion of the profits from the owners of passive property, and should the community generally accept such a scheme... | |
| |