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Czech Corporate Governance in the Light of its History and the Influence of the G20/OECD Corporate Governance Principles
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SYSNO ASEP 0568122 Document Type J - Journal Article R&D Document Type Journal Article Subsidiary J Článek ve WOS Title Czech Corporate Governance in the Light of its History and the Influence of the G20/OECD Corporate Governance Principles Author(s) Havel, Bohumil (USP-I) ORCID
Lasák, J. (CZ)
Pihera, Vlastimil (USP-I)
Štenglová, I. (CZ)Source Title European Business Organization Law Review - ISSN 1566-7529
Roč. 24, č. 1 (2023), s. 167-200Number of pages 34 s. Publication form Online - E Language eng - English Country NL - Netherlands Keywords corporate governance ; private joint stock company ; corporate law ; civil law ; European company law ; legal transplants ; OECD corporate governance principles Subject RIV AG - Legal Sciences OECD category Law R&D Projects GA19-24949S GA ČR - Czech Science Foundation (CSF) Method of publishing Open access Institutional support USP-I - RVO:68378122 UT WOS 000805086600001 DOI 10.1007/s40804-022-00253-3 Annotation This article maps the development of Czech corporate law after 1989 against the backdrop of the gradual change of private law and its paradigms as well as considering especially the influence and use of corporate governance soft law. It describes some of the economic, political and social reasons that slowed down or marginalized the relevance of OECD Corporate Governance Principles after the transition of Czechoslovakia and later the Czech Republic to democratic law. At the same time, the article attempts to show that while the gradual recodification of corporate law, in particular corporate governance rules, did not provide much support for the use of corporate governance codes, it nevertheless reflected the relevant rules and recommendations for statutory rules, thus, partially attaining similar goals. The authors of this article therefore believe that the lack of the practical development of some aspects of corporate governance or corporate social responsibility is often not due to the inadequacy of legal regulation but is rather the result of an overestimation of the personal characteristics of entrepreneurs, their reluctance to introduce complex governance structures and a rigid or very conservative interpretive positivism. Workplace Institute of State and Law Contact Iveta Bůžková, iveta.buzkova@ilaw.cas.cz, Tel.: 221 990 714 Year of Publishing 2024 Electronic address https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s40804-022-00253-3
Number of the records: 1