Corporate Governance in Small and Medium-sized Firms

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Corporate Governance in Small and Medium-sized Firms

9781849800440 Edward Elgar Publishing
Edited by David B. Audretsch, Indiana University, US and the Department of Innovation Management and Entrepreneurship, University of Klagenfurt, Austria and Erik E. Lehmann, Professor of Management and Organization, University of Augsburg, Germany
Publication Date: 2011 ISBN: 978 1 84980 044 0 Extent: 768 pp
The analysis of corporate governance in small and medium-sized firms has been a much-neglected aspect of study in the field of corporate governance. This essential volume provides an authoritative overview of research in this topical field by successfully linking classical papers on corporate governance to the specific aspects in SMEs. The purpose of this volume is not only to provide a review of the literature on governance in SMEs, but also from other social sciences and management perspectives. This collection, with an original introduction by the editors, will be of great interest not only to lecturers and students interested in corporate governance but also to managers and policy makers.

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Critical Acclaim
Contributors
Contents
More Information
The analysis of corporate governance in small and medium-sized firms has been a much-neglected aspect of study in the field of corporate governance. This essential volume provides an authoritative overview of research in this topical field by successfully linking classical papers on corporate governance to the specific aspects in SMEs. The purpose of this volume is not only to provide a review of the literature on governance in SMEs, but also from other social sciences and management perspectives. This collection, with an original introduction by the editors, will be of great interest not only to lecturers and students interested in corporate governance but also to managers and policy makers.
Critical Acclaim
‘Corporate governance scholarship has been considerably enriched over the past decade as more scholars have begun to ask how governance problems vary across organizational contexts. Scholars seeking to understand and build on those developments will find this volume a very useful resource. In it, Audretsch and Lehmann have assembled several “classic” pieces of governance scholarship alongside a number of more recent pieces that point the way towards promising new avenues of research.’
– Daniel Forbes, University of Minnesota, US
Contributors
37 articles, dating from 1965 to 2010
Contributors include: J.J. Chisman, C.M. Daily, H. Demsetz, D.K. Denis, E.F. Fama, M. Huse, M. Jenson, P.G.Klein, M. Wright, L. Zingales
Contents
Contents:

Acknowledgements

Introduction David B. Audretsch and Erik E. Lehmann

PART I CORPORATE GOVERNANCE: THEORY AND CONCEPTS
A. Governance Theory
1. Michael C. Jensen and William H. Meckling (1976), ‘Theory of the Firm: Managerial Behaviour, Agency Costs, and Ownership Structure’
2. Eugene F. Fama and Michael C. Jensen (1983), ‘Separation of Ownership and Control’
3. Harold Demsetz (1983), ‘The Structure of Ownership and the Theory of the Firm’
4. Henry G. Manne (1965), ‘Mergers and the Market for Corporate Control’
5. Eugene F. Fama (1980), ‘Agency Problems and the Theory of the Firm’
6. Raghuram G. Rajan and Luigi Zingales (2000), ‘The Governance of the New Enterprise’

B. Governance Concepts
7. Diane K. Denis (2001), ‘Twenty-five Years of Corporate Governance Research… and Counting’
8. Lorraine Uhlaner, Mike Wright and Morten Huse (2007), ‘Private Firms and Corporate Governance: An Integrated Economic and Management Perspective’
9. Peter G. Klein (1999), ‘Entrepreneurship and Corporate Governance’
10. Catherine M. Daily, Patricia P. McDougall, Jeffrey G. Covin and Dan R. Dalton (2002), ‘Governance and Strategic Leadership in Entrepreneurial Firms’
11. Thomas M. Zellweger, Kimberly A. Eddleston and Franz W. Kellermanns (2010), ‘Exploring the Concept of Familiness: Introducing Family Firm Identity’
12. James J. Chrisman, Jess H. Chua, Franz W. Kellermann and Erick P.C. Chang (2007), ‘Are Family Managers Agents or Stewards? An Exploratory Study in Privately Held Family Firms’
13. Wayne H. Stewart, Jr., Warren E. Watson, Joann C. Carland and James W. Carland (1998), ‘A Proclivity for Entrepreneurship: A Comparison of Entrepreneurs, Small Business Owners, and Corporate Managers’

PART II MANAGERIAL OWNERSHIP IN SME
14. Theresa M. Welbourne and Linda A. Cyr (1999), ‘Using Ownership as an Incentive: Does the “Too Many Chiefs” Rule Apply in Entrepreneurial Firms?’
15. Randolph P. Beatty and Edward J. Zajac (1994), ‘Managerial Incentives, Monitoring, and Risk Bearing: A Study of Executive Compensation, Ownership, and Board Structures in Initial Public Offerings’
16. Erik E. Lehmann (2006), ‘Corporate Governance in New Enterprises or: Why Do Some CEOs Hold Large Equity Stakes While Others Are Paid Through Stock Options?’

PART III MARKET MECHANISMS: PRODUCT MARKET COMPETITION, MARKET FOR CORPORATE CONTROL AND MARKET FOR MANAGERS
A. The Product Market
17. Marc Cowling (2003), ‘Productivity and Corporate Governance in Smaller Firms’
18. Trond Randøy, Clay Dibrell and Justin B. Craig (2009), ‘Founding Family Leadership and Industry Profitability’

B. The Market for Corporate Control
19. Damiano Bonardo, Stefano Paleari and Silvio Vismara (2010), ‘The M&A Dynamics of European Science-based Entrepreneurial Firms’
20. Jung-Chin Shen and Jeffrey J. Reuer (2005), ‘Adverse Selection in Acquisitions of Small Manufactoring Firms: A Comparison of Private and Public Targets’

C. The Market for Managers
21. C. Mirjam van Praag (2003), ‘Business Survival and Success of Young Small Business Owners’
22. Pramodita Sharma, James J. Chrisman and Jess H. Chua (2003), ‘Predictors of Satisfaction with the Succession Process in Family Firms’

PART IV INSTITUTIONAL MECHANISMS: BOARD OF DIRECTORS AND LARGE SHAREHOLDERS
A. The Role of Boards in SME
23. Benjamin E. Hermalin and Michael S. Weisbach (2003), ‘Boards of Directors as an Endogenously Determined Institution: A Survey of the Economic Literature’
24. Morten Huse (1990), ‘Board Composition in Small Enterprises’
25. Morten Huse (2000), ‘Boards of Directors in SMEs: A Review and Research Agenda’
26. Catherine M. Daily and Dan R. Dalton (1992), ‘The Relationship Between Governance Structure and Corporate Performance in Entrepreneurial Firms’
27. Bart Clarysse, Mirjam Knockaert and Andy Lockett (2007), ‘Outside Board Members in High-Tech Start-Ups’
28. Olof Brunninge, Mattias Nordqvist and Johan Wiklund (2007), ‘Corporate Governance and Strategic Change in SMEs: The Effects of Ownership, Board Composition and Top Management Teams’
29. Alessandro Minichilli and Cathrine Hansen (2007), ‘The Board Advisory Tasks in Small Firms and the Event of Crises’
30. Kevin Keasey, Helen Short and Robert Watson (1994), ‘Directors’ Ownership and the Performance of Small and Medium Sized Firms in the UK’

B. The Role and Influence of Large Shareholders
31. Lloyd Steier (2003), ‘Variants of Agency-Contracts in Family-financed Ventures as a Continuum of Familial Altruistic and Market Rationalities’
32. David B. Audretsch and Julie A. Elston (1997), ‘Financing the German Mittelstand’
33. Steven N. Kaplan and Per Strömberg (2001), ‘Venture Capitalists as Principles: Contracting, Screening, and Monitoring’

PART V CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FROM ADOLESCENCE TO MATURITY
34. Malcolm Baker and Paul A. Gompers (2003), ‘The Determinants of Board Structure at the Initial Public Offering’
35. David B. Audretsch and Erik E. Lehmann (2005), ‘The Effects of Experience, Ownership, Knowledge on IPO Survival: Empirical Evidence from Germany’
36. Mike Wright, Robert E. Hoskisson, Lowell W. Busenitz and Jay Dial (2000), ‘Entrepreneurial Growth Through Privatization: The Upside of Management Buy Outs’
37. Matthew D. Lynall, Brian R. Golden and Amy J. Hillman (2003), ‘Board Composition from Adolescence to Maturity: A Multitheoretic View’
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