Corporations
Professor James Feinerman
LL.M Course 121 | 3 credit hours

    Students should note that Corporations is a prerequisite for Advanced Corporate Law, Comparative Corporate Law, Corporate Finance, Securities Regulation, Business Planning Seminar, and corporate law seminars.

This is a basic course in business corporations. Brief coverage is given to factors bearing on choice of organization, including partnership attributes, process of corporate formation, corporate privileges and powers, corporate capital structure, and limited liability. Close examination is given to the governance structure of the corporation and the fiduciary obligations of directors and officers. The particular nature of the public corporation is explored. Topics studied may include stock trading by corporate insiders, transactions in corporation control, and the procedural problems in stockholder derivative suits. Along with a focus on such policy questions as federal-state jurisdiction, the nature of the corporate governance system, and the role of the corporation in modern society, the course deals with the role of the lawyer in corporate matters.

Prof. Feinerman's 3-credit section US intended for students who have already completed a course in the Corporation or Company Law of a non-US jurisdiction. Thus, it will presume familiarity with the basic vocabulary and fundamental concepts of corporate law and focus on salient divergent features of US corporate law.

Course No. Cr. Faculty Days/Times  
Fall 2009 Schedule
LAWG-121-10
(CRN #: 13549)
3 Feinerman J
 202    T  11:10 -12:10
 202    R  10:00 -12:00
12/9B
 
  Options

Notes:
     This section is for foreign-educated LL.M.s only. J.D. students and LL.M. students who received their law degrees in the U.S. MAY NOT register for this course. This course does count towards the Securities and Financial Regulation credits for foreign educated attorneys though.