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- John C. Coffee, Jr. Adolf A. Berle Professor of Law
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- In the Media
The media looks to Columbia Law experts to provide ideas, opinions, analysis, and commentary on news of the day. Explore more below.
- Areas of Study
- Constitutional Law
- Featured Faculty
- Katharina Pistor Edwin B. Parker Professor of Comparative Law
- Areas of Study
- International and Comparative Law
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- Katharina Pistor
- Featured Faculty
- Katharina Pistor Edwin B. Parker Professor of Comparative Law
- Areas of Study
- National Security and Privacy
- Topics
- Katharina Pistor
- Featured Faculty
- Katharina Pistor Edwin B. Parker Professor of Comparative Law
- Areas of Study
- International and Comparative Law
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- Anu Bradford
- Featured Faculty
- Anu Bradford Henry L. Moses Professor of Law and International Organization
- Areas of Study
- Corporate, Business, and Transactional Law
- Topics
- Katharina Pistor
- Featured Faculty
- Katharina Pistor Edwin B. Parker Professor of Comparative Law
- Areas of Study
- Constitutional Law
- Topics
- Katharina Pistor
- Featured Faculty
- Katharina Pistor Edwin B. Parker Professor of Comparative Law
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By Katharina Pistor
The fact that American CEOs think they can choose their own masters attests not just to their own sense of entitlement, but also to the state of corporate America, where power over globe-spanning business empires is concentrated in the hands of just a few men (and far fewer women). . . . By capturing the process to which they owe their own positions, American CEOs have made a mockery of shareholder control.
- Featured Faculty
- Katharina Pistor Edwin B. Parker Professor of Comparative Law
- Other Information
By Charles Sabel and Dani Rodrik
The strategy we have in mind would comprise three mutually reinforcing components: an increase in the skill level and productivity of existing jobs, by providing extension services to improve management or cooperative programs to advance technology; an increase in the number of good jobs by supporting the expansion of existing, local firms or attracting investment by outsiders; and active labor-market policies or workforce-development programs to help workers, especially from at-risk groups, master the skills required to obtain good jobs.
- Featured Faculty
- Charles F. Sabel Maurice T. Moore Professor of Law