Shareholder Activism in the UK
De Gruyter Studies in Corporate Governance 4
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Zusatztext
Shareholder activism is not a totally new phenomenon in the UK as there were historical suggestions of owners' engagements in the era of chartered companies (pre-incorporation period). There were also many evidences of unconventional and uncoordinated shareholder engagement techniques especially by minority shareholders after the Second World War up to 2006 when the 2006 Companies Act recognised the need to make it easier for shareholders to present resolutions at general meetings. These developments, alongside various deliberate actions by government and international organisations like UNPRI in increasing shareholder engagement, together with other new developments like integrated reporting systems, responsible investing, and climate change, have given rise to various forms of activism which have not been documented and analysed by previous writers. As a consequence of the historical developments above, understanding the various theoretical perspectives that have shaped shareholder engagement, shareholder activism gaps, motivations, its forms and effects, and comparative shareholder activism based on practice from other jurisdictions, were also fully discussed and analysed from a critical perspective. Shareholder resolutions submitted in the UK between 2007 and 2017 were also analysed, and this demonstrated the emerging powers and the conflicted roles of proxy advisors, social investors and other influential investors such as UKSA and ShareSoc in the UK investment chain. Other emerging issues such as the usefulness of analysis of analyst type investors meetings were also critically discussed.
Autorenportrait
Posi Olatubosun, University of East London, UK; Jill Atkins, University of Sheffield, UK
Weitere Details
Erschienen: 15.01.2025
Umfang: 250 S., 24 s/w Illustr., 24 s/w Tab., 24 b/w ill.,
Sprache: ENG
Einband: GEB
ISBN/EAN: 9783110646573
Umbreit-Nr.: 6252573
