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The independent director and effective corporate governance

As a response to the rash of scandals in particularly USA and Europe in recent times, corporate governance has elicited a lot of interest worldwide. Today there is growing dialogue among the different stakeholders about corporate governance and how it should evolve to cope with the increasingly dyna...

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Main Author: Iwe, Chizaboda
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Commercial Law 2014
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access_status_str Open Access
author Iwe, Chizaboda
author_browse Iwe, Chizaboda
author_facet Iwe, Chizaboda
author_sort Iwe, Chizaboda
collection Thesis
description As a response to the rash of scandals in particularly USA and Europe in recent times, corporate governance has elicited a lot of interest worldwide. Today there is growing dialogue among the different stakeholders about corporate governance and how it should evolve to cope with the increasingly dynamic and global nature of our capital markets. Worldwide, corporate reforms and other initiatives are being taken as remedies to rebuild trust in corporate governance. Corporate reforms have led to the introduction in many countries of various codes or guidelines for best practices in corporate governance. Until now, probably the most important basic ingredient of these reform initiatives has been the emergence of the 'independent director'. The introduction of this concept of independent director is at the heart and soul of corporate governance. Although the relevance or otherwise of this class of director to corporate success has been the subject of robust discourse, it is generally accepted that a 'lack of monitoring by independent, disinterested non-executive directors has been a major cause for the various corporate scandals that we have witnessed'. The first section of this study attempts a comparative analysis of various definitions (taken from corporate governance codes of various countries) of the independent director, taking a look at his role within the corporate structure. The second part examines the rationale for including the viii viii independent director on the board, his effectiveness, and his relevance in relation to corporate performance.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
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provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2014
publishDateRange 2014
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publisher Department of Commercial Law
publisherStr Department of Commercial Law
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/4635 The independent director and effective corporate governance Iwe, Chizaboda As a response to the rash of scandals in particularly USA and Europe in recent times, corporate governance has elicited a lot of interest worldwide. Today there is growing dialogue among the different stakeholders about corporate governance and how it should evolve to cope with the increasingly dynamic and global nature of our capital markets. Worldwide, corporate reforms and other initiatives are being taken as remedies to rebuild trust in corporate governance. Corporate reforms have led to the introduction in many countries of various codes or guidelines for best practices in corporate governance. Until now, probably the most important basic ingredient of these reform initiatives has been the emergence of the 'independent director'. The introduction of this concept of independent director is at the heart and soul of corporate governance. Although the relevance or otherwise of this class of director to corporate success has been the subject of robust discourse, it is generally accepted that a 'lack of monitoring by independent, disinterested non-executive directors has been a major cause for the various corporate scandals that we have witnessed'. The first section of this study attempts a comparative analysis of various definitions (taken from corporate governance codes of various countries) of the independent director, taking a look at his role within the corporate structure. The second part examines the rationale for including the viii viii independent director on the board, his effectiveness, and his relevance in relation to corporate performance. 2014-07-30T18:14:40Z 2014-07-30T18:14:40Z 2014-07-30 Master Thesis Masters LLM http://hdl.handle.net/11427/4635 en application/pdf Department of Commercial Law Faculty of Law University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Iwe, Chizaboda
The independent director and effective corporate governance
thesis_degree_str Master's
title The independent director and effective corporate governance
title_full The independent director and effective corporate governance
title_fullStr The independent director and effective corporate governance
title_full_unstemmed The independent director and effective corporate governance
title_short The independent director and effective corporate governance
title_sort independent director and effective corporate governance
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/4635
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