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Securities Arbitrations Involving Mortgage-Backed Securities And Collateralized Mortgage Obligations: Suitable For Unsuitability Claims?
Despite Initial Fears To The Contrary, It Appears That Sarbanes-Oxley Gave Private Litigants A “Dull Sword” When It Comes To Piercing The Corporate Veil
Fordham University - Collins Audtorium
Thirteen students entered Collins Auditorium in September 1905 to attend the newly established Fordham Law School. The College of Saint Francis Xavier on West 16th Street in Manhattan was slated to be Fordham Law School\u27s first home, but when Xavier\u27s enrollment unexpectedly increased, the Law School was denied facilities. Fordham University\u27s President, Father Collins, decided to open the Law School on the Rose Hill Campus in the Bronx.https://ir.lawnet.fordham.edu/collins_auditorium/1000/thumbnail.jp
The Case Against Exempting Smaller Reporting Companies from Sarbanes-Oxley Section 404: Why Market-Based Solutions Are Likely to Harm Ordinary Investors
Warming Up to Climate Change Risk Disclosure
Investors are clamoring for companies to include more climate change risk disclosure in their periodic reports filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). Yet public companies in the United States do a poor job of disclosing to investors how climate change affects their businesses. Although there have been several proposals for more voluntary disclosure of these risks and one petition for guidance from the SEC, these proposals are not effecting changes in disclosure practices quickly enough. This Article builds on existing proposals to create guidelines for mandatory climate change risk disclosure in periodic securities filings. The guidelines seek to provide investors with meaningful disclosure, without overburdening the companies making the disclosure. This framework could be used by the SEC in formulating guidance regarding climate change risk disclosure under existing disclosure rules, or in creating new rules mandating the disclosure. Investors are clamoring for companies to include more climate change risk disclosure in their periodic reports filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). Yet public companies in the United States do a poor job of disclosing to investors how climate change affects their businesses. Although there have been several proposals for more voluntary disclosure of these risks and one petition for guidance from the SEC, these proposals are not effecting changes in disclosure practices quickly enough. This Article builds on existing proposals to create guidelines for mandatory climate change risk disclosure in periodic securities filings. The guidelines seek to provide investors with meaningful disclosure, without overburdening the companies making the disclosure. This framework could be used by the SEC in formulating guidance regarding climate change risk disclosure under existing disclosure rules, or in creating new rules mandating the disclosure
Fordham University - Announcement of the School of Law
The bulletin provides a short history of the school, faculty members, purpose of the school, admission requirements, the course of study, fees, and registration information.https://ir.lawnet.fordham.edu/registrar/1000/thumbnail.jp
Announcement of the Law School / Bulletin of Information 1905-1906
First Law School bulletin. Contains historical statement, purpose of the school, list of faculty, administration, curriculum (course of studies), system of instruction, tuition costs and fees, scholarships, requirements for admissionhttps://ir.lawnet.fordham.edu/bulletins/1000/thumbnail.jp
The LLC As Recombinant Entity: Revisiting Fundamental Questions Through The Llc Lens
Rather than being a simple hybrid, the U.S. limited liability company is better described as a recombinant entity that combines attributes of four different types of business organizations. The LLC offers an almost ineffably flexible structure, but that flexibility does not place the LLC beyond the range of traditional, formalist analysis. To the contrary, parsing the LLC in pursuit of conventional forms may allow us “to know the place for the first time.” This essay uses conventional concepts to: (i) explore whether “labels matter” when LLC membership interests are described as Contract or as Property; and (ii) examine how the plight of the “bare naked assignee” relates to the LLC’s status as a legal person distinct from its members
John Whalen, 1912-1919
Portrait that appeared on page 4 of the NY Daily Tribune on May 10, 1900.https://ir.lawnet.fordham.edu/whalen_photographs/1000/thumbnail.jp