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O curso será realizado no dia 31 de Outubro das 9h às 11h na Faculdade de Ciências Econômicas da UFRGS, Av. João Pessoa, 52, 3° andar.
Giácomo Balbinotto Neto (PPGE/UFRGS e PPGDIR/UFRGS)
Ronald Hillbrecht (PPGE/UFRGS)
Eugênio Battesini (PRF4/AGU)
O professor Fox é uma das maiores autoridades mundiais em Mercado de Capitais, sendo reconhecido em "Wall Street" como um dos maiores especialistas na "bolsa eletrônica NASDAQ". Além disso, leciona regularmente na Universidade de Columbia in the City of New York, na qual é co-diretor do "Center for Law and Economic Studies"
Merritt Fox is the Michael E. Patterson Professor of Law and the NASDAQ Professor of the Columbia Law School-Columbia Business School Joint Project on the Law and Economics of Capital Markets.
B.A., 1968, Yale; J.D., 1971; Ph.D. (Economics), 1980. Practiced with the firm of Cleary, Gottlieb, Steen & Hamilton, 1974-80. Adjunct professor teaching law and economics, Yale and Fordham, 1974-80. Taught at Indiana University Law School in Bloomington before joining the University of Michigan Law School faculty in 1988, where he was the Alene and Allan F. Smith Professor of Law and faculty director of the school's Center for International and Comparative Law. He is author of Finance and Industrial Performance in a Dynamic Economy (1987); The Signature of Power: Buildings, Communication and Policy (with H. Lasswell, 1979). He is also co-editor, with Michael Heller, of Corporate Governance Lessons from Transitional Economies (2006). Much of his recent scholarship is in the areas of international securities regulation, the value of mandatory disclosure, and comparative corporate governance. Articles include "Civil Liability and Mandatory Disclosure," Columbia Law Review (forthcoming 2009); "Gatekeeper Failures: Why Important, What to Do," Michigan Law Review (2008); "Understanding Dura," The Business Lawyer (2005); "Demystifying Causation in Fraud-on-the-Market Actions," The Business Lawyer (2005); "Measuring Share Price Accuracy," Berkeley Business Law Journal (2004); "What's So Special About Multinational Enterprises: A Comment on Avi-Yonah," Columbia Journal of Transnational Law (2004); "Law, Share Price Accuracy, and Economic Performance," Michigan Law Review (2003); "Optimal Regulatory Areas for Securities Disclosure," Washington Univ. Law Quarterly (2003); "U.S. Perspectives on Global Securities Market Disclosure Regulation: A Critical Review," European Business Organization Review (2002); "Imposing Liability for Losses from Aggressive War: An Economic Analysis of the UNCC," European Journal of International Law (2002); "The Issuer Choice Debate," Theoretical Inquiries in Law (2001); "Regulation FD and Foreign Issuers: Globalization's Strains and Opportunities," Virginia Journal of International Law (2001); "Company.Registration and the Private Placement Exemption," Case Western Reserve Law Review (2001); "Corporate Governance Lessons from Russian Enterprise Fiascoes," NYU Law Review (2000); "The Securities Globalization Disclosure Debate," Washington University Law Quarterly (2000); "Required Disclosure and Corporate Governance," Law & Contemporary Problems (1999); "Retaining Mandatory Securities Disclosure: Why Issuer Choice is Not Investor Empowerment," Virginia Law Review (1999); "The Political Economy of Statutory Reach: U.S. Disclosure Rules in a Globalizing Market for Securities," Michigan Law Review (1998); and "Securities Disclosure in a Globalizing Market: Who Should Regulate Whom?" Michigan Law Review (1997). Professor Fox is past chair of the Business Association section of the American Association of Law Schools. He is co-director of the Center for Law and Economic Studies at Columbia Law School.
Publications
Short Selling and the News: A Preliminary Report on an Empirical Study, 54 N.Y.L.S. Rev 645 (2010) (with Lawrence Glosten and Paul Tetlock)
Civil Liability and Mandatory Disclosure, 109 Colum. L. Rev. 237 (2009)
Why Civil Liability for Disclosure Violations When Issuers do not Trade, 2009 Wisconsin L. Rev. 299
Regulation and the Competitiveness of U.S. Securities Markets in Sesquicentennial Essays of the Faculty of Columbia Law School (2008)
Gatekeeper Failures: Why Important, What to Do, 106 Mich. L. Rev. 1089 (2008)
Corporate Governance Lessons from Transitional Economies (Princeton University Press) (2006) (co-edited with Michael Heller).
What is Good Corporate Governance?, in Corporate Governance Lessons from Transition Economy Reforms, Merritt B. Fox and Michael Heller, eds. (Princeton University Press (2006)
The Unexplored Role of Initial Conditions, in Corporate Governance Lessons from Transition Economy Reforms, Merritt B. Fox and Michael Heller, eds. (Princeton University Press (2006)
After Dura: Causation in Fraud-on-the-Market Actions, 31 J. Corp. L. (2005-2006)
Comment on Russian Corporate Governance Today, 1 Corporate Governance in Russia and Transitional Economics (2006)
Understanding Dura, 60 Bus. Law. 1547 (2005).
Demystifying Causation in Fraud-on-the-Market Actions, 60 Bus. Law. 507 (2005).
Corporate and Securities Law Conditions in the Acquis Communautaire: A Comment on Pistor and Berglof and Pajuste in LAW AND GOVERNANCE IN AN ENLARGED EUROPEAN UNION, George A. Bermann and Katharina Pistor, eds. Portland: Hart Publishing, 2004, pp. 377-389.
Measuring Share Price Accuracy, 1 Berkeley Bus. L. J. 113 (2004).
What's So Special About Multinational Enterprises: A Comment on Avi-Yonah, 42 Columbia J. Transnat'l L. 551 (2004).
Law, Share Price Accuracy and Economic Performance: The New Evidence (with Artyom Durnev, Randall Morck, Bernard Yeung), 102 Mich. L. Rev. 331 (2003).
Optimal Regulatory Areas for Securities Disclosure, 81 Wash. U.L.Q. 1017 (2003).
U.S. Perspectives on Global Securities Market Regulation: A Critical Review, 3 Eur. Bus. Org. Rev. 337 (2002).
Imposing Liability for Losses from Aggressive War: An Economic Analysis of the UNCC, 13 Eur. J. Int'l Law 201 (2002).
The Issuer Choice Debate, 2 Theoretical Inquiries in Law 563 (2001).
Regulation FD and Foreign Issuers: Globalization's Strains and Opportunities, 41 Va. J. Int'l. Law 653 (2001).
Company Registration and the Private Placement Exemption, 51 Case Western Reserve L. Rev. 455 (2001).
Ownership Structures and the Decision to Go Public: A Comment on Bebchuk and Zingales, in CONCENTRATED CORPORATE OWNERSHIP, Randall Morck, ed. NBER and University of Chicago Press (2000).
The Securities Globalization Disclosure Debate, 78 Wash. U. L. Q. 567 (2000).
Corporate Governance Lessons from Russian Enterprise Fiascoes, 75 N.Y.U. L.. Rev. 1720 (2000) (with Michael Heller).
Required Disclosure and Corporate Governance, 62 Law & Contemp. Prob. 113 (1999) (revised version of book article of same title).
Retaining Mandatory Securities Disclosure: Why Issuer Choice is Not Investor Empowerment, 85 Va. L. Rev. 1335 (1999).
The Political Economy of Statutory Reach: U.S. Disclosure Rules in a Globalizing Market for Securities, 97 Mich. L. Rev. 696 (1998).
Required Disclosure and Corporate Governance, in Klaus Hopt, Mark Roe & Eddy Wymeersch, eds. COMPARATIVE CORPORATE GOVERNANCE: THE STATE OF THE ART AND EMERGING RESEARCH, Oxford University Press (1998).
Mandatory Disclosure in a Globalizing Market For Securities: Who Should Regulate Whom?, 39 Corp. Prac. Commentator 565 (1998) (republication of 1997 article of same title).
Rethinking Disclosure Liability in the Modern Era, 75 Wash. U. L. Q. 903 (1997).
Securities Disclosure in a Globalizing Market: Who Should Regulate Whom?, 95 Mich. L. Rev. 2498 (1997).
The Legal Environment of International Finance: Thinking About Fundamentals, 17 Mich J. Int'l. L. 721 (1996).
Thinking to be Paid versus Being Paid to Think, 38 Law Quad Notes (Fall 1995) (abridged version of 1994 article of same title).
Insider Trading Deterrence versus Managerial Incentives: A Unified Theory of Section 16(b), 92 Mich. L. Rev. 2088 (1994).
Thinking to be Paid versus Being Paid to Think, 19 J. Corp. Law 761 (1994).
Insider Trading in a Globalizing Market: Who Should Regulate What, 26 Securities Law Review 355 (1994). (reprint of 1992 article of same title).
Insider Trading in a Globalizing Securities Market: Who Should Regulate What, 55 Law and Contemp. Prob. 263 (1992).
Corporate Successors Under Strict Liability: A General Economic Theory and the Case of CERCLA, 26 Wake Forest L. Rev. 183 (1991) (symposium issue on environmental law and the corporate entity).
The Role of the Market Model in Corporate Law Analysis: A Comment on Weiss and White, 76 Calif. L. Rev. 1015 (1988).
FINANCE AND INDUSTRIAL PERFORMANCE IN A DYNAMIC ECONOMY: THEORY, PRACTICE AND POLICY (Columbia University Press, 1987) (455 pp.).
Shelf Registration, Integrated Disclosure, and Underwriter Due Diligence: An Economic Analysis, 70 Va. L. Rev. 1005-1034 (1984).
The Legal Environment For International Business, BUSINESS LAW: PRINCIPLES AND CASES, Lusk, Hewitt, Donnell and Barnes, ed. (Richard D. Irwin, 6th edition, 1985) (revision of 1982 piece).
The Legal Environment For International Business, BUSINESS LAW: PRINCIPLES AND CASES, Lusk, Hewitt, Donnell and Barnes, ed. (Richard D. Irwin, 5th edition, 1982).
THE SIGNATURE OF POWER: BUILDINGS, COMMUNICATION AND POLICY (Transaction Books, 1979) (collaborator with Harold D. Lasswell).