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Industrializing English Law

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Industrializing English Law Synopsis

Between the passage of the Bubble Act in 1720 and the sweeping reforms of the General Incorporation Act of 1844, the legal framework of business organization in England remained remarkably stagnant despite the profound economic and structural changes wrought by the Industrial Revolution. Originally published in 2000, this book analyzes why this discrepancy occurred, especially when other nations of that time, whose economies were far less developed, were evolving more permissive laws of business organization. Employing extensive primary source archival material, Ron Harris shows how the institutional development of major forms of business organization - the business corporation, the partnership, the trust, the unincorporated joint-stock company - evolved and how English law finally took account of these developments.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9780521182522
Publication date:
Author: Ron TelAviv University Harris
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Format: Paperback
Pagination: 350 pages
Series: Political Economy of Institutions and Decisions
Genres: Private or civil law: general
Political economy