corporate interests

  • 1Corporate nationalism — Not to be confused with Business nationalism. Corporatism …

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  • 2Corporate law — (also company or corporations law) is the study of how shareholders, directors, employees, creditors, and other stakeholders such as consumers, the community and the environment interact with one another under the internal rules of the firm.… …

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  • 3Corporate Colonization — reflects that as organizations and corporations become the more centralized source of power within our societies, the more that an individual will derive their identity and values from the organization (Deetz 1992). This is opposed to the other… …

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  • 4Corporate media — Corporate board interlocks between various U.S. corporations/institutions, and four of the major media/telecom corporations (circled in red), in 2004. Corporate media is a term which refers to a system of mass media production, distribution,… …

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  • 5Corporate benefit — (sometimes referred to as commercial benefit) is the requirement under some legal systems that the directors of a company must exercise the powers [For these purposes, it is important to remember the distinction between objects (what the company… …

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  • 6Corporate communication — is the message issued by a corporate organization, body, or institute to its publics. Publics can be both internal (employees, stakeholders, i.e. share and stock holders) and external (agencies, channel partners, media, government, industry… …

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  • 7Corporate Statism — is an approach to state organization, the likes of which Othmar Spann, Benito Mussolini and others are credited with developing. Corporate Statism involves the ruling party acting as a mediator between the workers, capitalists and other prominent …

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  • 8Corporate advisory — refers to the activity of advising organisations, including corporations, institutions and government bodies, on mergers and acquisitions and other transactions that involve a change in ownership of a company or business. In investment banking… …

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  • 9Corporate law in the United States — is a collection of over 50 different systems of corporate law, or one law for each state. Two sources of law are, however particularly important: the Model Business Corporation Act (MBCA), drafted by the American Bar Association was influential… …

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  • 10Corporate capitalism — is a term used in social science and economics to describe a capitalist marketplace characterized by the dominance of hierarchical, bureaucratic corporations, which are legally required to pursue profit. A large proportion of the economy and… …

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