Modern capitalism and political freedom rest on concepts of conscience and morality, and abhor concentrations of unbridled power. America's economic and political system has developed mechanisms designed to check and balance such power. Despite these mechanisms, there are chief executives who abuse their power in a fraudulent and self-serving pursuit of wealth and authority. How did this happen? How did the system respond? What can be done to prevent it in the future? Corruption in Corporate America seeks to answer these questions. The analysis is supported by a look ahead at the prospective results of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, the law intended as a corrective response to corporate corruption.
Almost a centennial. What is now the Stern School began in 1900 as training for people entering the New York financial markets, but like all good marketers, Gitlow anticipates the event. He provides an institutional history of the undergraduate school through the 1980s and the graduate school 1960-90, examines external evaluations and accreditation, student life, the alumni, and the school's outlook. Annotation copyright by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR
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