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Capital market, regulatory and technological developments have created investor appetite and capacity for engagement with public companies. Our paper explores key engagement mechanisms and techniques employed by public company shareholders. First, shareholder-company engagement is a multi-dimensional, evolving phenomenon. Shareholders use a range of techniques including shareholder meetings, behind-the-scenes interactions, public campaigns, and online technologies. Second, shareholders mix and match different engagement techniques to leverage governance influence. Third, shareholders increasingly undertake their engagement activities collectively, highlighting growing capacity to overcome traditional collective action challenges. Finally, the shareholder meeting remains an important engagement mechanism. Its formal, in-person and public nature sets it apart from other mechanisms and gives it unique potential as a forum for scrutiny and accountability. Although low attendance rates indicate that shareholders do not routinely utilise the meeting to maximum effect, it is better conceived as having contingent significance because its potential as an accountability mechanism can prove critical when a company experiences serious governance problems.
How should corporations be run? Who should get a say, and what results can we expect? Hard Lessons in Corporate Governance provides an accessible introduction to the various failed attempts at using corporate governance to improve society. It introduces the record of these failures and illuminates hard lessons spread across thousands of empirical studies. If we look at the outcomes generated by various corporate governance 'best' practices, we find that none of the practices work. If we look at the theories and assumptions that support modern corporate governance, we find they are likely wrong. And if we look at the prospect of corporate governance to improve political, environmental, and social outcomes, we find ample evidence that governance will fail us here too. After documenting these failures, Bryce Tingle K.C. turns to the most important lesson: How to fix this important, but broken, system.
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