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The Logic and Limits of Bankruptcy Law

The Logic and Limits of Bankruptcy Law
Author: Thomas H. Jackson
Publisher: Beard Books
Total Pages: 304
Release: 2001
Genre: Law
ISBN: 9781587981142

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A careful analysis of the fundamentals of bankruptcy law.


Book Review

Book Review
Author: Donald F. Brosnan
Publisher:
Total Pages: 23
Release: 1988
Genre: Bankruptcy
ISBN:

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The Logic and Limits of Municipal Bankruptcy Law

The Logic and Limits of Municipal Bankruptcy Law
Author: Vincent S.J. Buccola
Publisher:
Total Pages: 54
Release: 2019
Genre:
ISBN:

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Municipal bankruptcy's recent prominence has stimulated academic interest in the workings of Chapter 9, much of it critical, but no general framework has been developed against which scholars and policymakers can evaluate the law's performance. This article offers a normative, economic account of municipal bankruptcy and uses that account to assess current law and suggest changes. It contends that bankruptcy's singular aim should be to preserve spatial economies--the advantages to locating within a municipality's unique geographic boundaries--where large public debts, by discouraging investment, threaten to dissipate them. Judged with this end in view, it is argued, Chapter 9 is a marked failure. The law's compass is so narrow that intervention comes, if at all, only when spatial economies are likely to have been squandered and economic dysfunction taken hold. Municipal bankruptcy, as it now exists, serves mainly as an ad hoc and ill-conceived subsidy program. This article outlines changes to the law that could hasten debt relief, while acknowledging potential objections.


Bankruptcy Crimes

Bankruptcy Crimes
Author: Stephanie Wickouski
Publisher: Beard Books
Total Pages: 438
Release: 2007
Genre: Law
ISBN: 1587982722

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This authoritative treatise on bankruptcy fraud is an invaluable reference book for bankruptcy law practitioners, white-collar criminal lawyers, prosecutors, judges, restructuring professionals, and academicians. Bankruptcy Crimes is the only book extant on the subject and is unique in its dual perspective and analysis of criminality and bankruptcy law.


Research Handbook on Corporate Bankruptcy Law

Research Handbook on Corporate Bankruptcy Law
Author: Barry E. Adler
Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing
Total Pages: 456
Release: 2020-06-26
Genre: Law
ISBN: 1781007888

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In this Research Handbook, today’s leading experts on the law and economics of corporate bankruptcy address fundamental issues such as the efficiency of bankruptcy, the role and treatment of creditors – particularly secured creditors – in the bankruptcy process, the allocation of going-concern surplus among claimants, the desirability of liquidation in the absence of such surplus, the role of contract in bankruptcy resolution, the role of derivatives in the bankruptcy process, the costs of the bankruptcy system, and the special case of financial institutions, among other topics.


Bankruptcy: Cases, Problems, and Materials, 5th

Bankruptcy: Cases, Problems, and Materials, 5th
Author: Barry Adler
Publisher: Foundation Press
Total Pages: 1014
Release: 2016-05
Genre:
ISBN: 9781599415994

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This edition retains the structure of the casebook's earlier editions, but expands its focus to capture the ways that current bankruptcy practice has been reshaped by lawyers and judges. The book reflects a continued commitment to the casebook's original account of bankruptcy law's logic and limits for individual debtors under Chapters 7 and 13 and for corporate debtors under Chapter 11. The updated material takes the book beyond this fundamental approach and adds a focus on modern practice, including new sections that address reorganization plan negotiation, gifting, structured dismissals, and third-party releases, among other important developments. In these ways, the new edition looks backwards and forwards simultaneously toward a more complete understanding of the subject.


Debt's Dominion

Debt's Dominion
Author: David A. Skeel Jr.
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Total Pages: 296
Release: 2014-04-24
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 1400828503

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Bankruptcy in America, in stark contrast to its status in most other countries, typically signifies not a debtor's last gasp but an opportunity to catch one's breath and recoup. Why has the nation's legal system evolved to allow both corporate and individual debtors greater control over their fate than imaginable elsewhere? Masterfully probing the political dynamics behind this question, David Skeel here provides the first complete account of the remarkable journey American bankruptcy law has taken from its beginnings in 1800, when Congress lifted the country's first bankruptcy code right out of English law, to the present day. Skeel shows that the confluence of three forces that emerged over many years--an organized creditor lobby, pro-debtor ideological currents, and an increasingly powerful bankruptcy bar--explains the distinctive contours of American bankruptcy law. Their interplay, he argues in clear, inviting prose, has seen efforts to legislate bankruptcy become a compelling battle royale between bankers and lawyers--one in which the bankers recently seem to have gained the upper hand. Skeel demonstrates, for example, that a fiercely divided bankruptcy commission and the 1994 Republican takeover of Congress have yielded the recent, ideologically charged battles over consumer bankruptcy. The uniqueness of American bankruptcy has often been noted, but it has never been explained. As different as twenty-first century America is from the horse-and-buggy era origins of our bankruptcy laws, Skeel shows that the same political factors continue to shape our unique response to financial distress.