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Business Scholarship Podcast

Latest episodes

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Jan 28, 2021 • 28min

Ep.88 – Kish Parella on Business and Human Rights

Kish Parella, associate professor of law at Washington & Lee University, joins the Business Scholarship Podcast to discuss her works Improving Social Compliance in Supply Chains and Compliance as an Exchange of Legitimacy for Influence. In these works, Parella examines the legal institutions and reputational mechanisms that foster human-rights compliance by transnational enterprises, as well as how that compliance might be influenced by developments like the draft UN business-and-human-rights treaty. This episode is hosted by Andrew Jennings, a teaching fellow and lecturer in law at Stanford Law School.
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Jan 21, 2021 • 0sec

Ep.87 – Carlos Berdejó on Financing Minority Entrepreneurship

Carlos Berdejó, professor of law at Loyola Law School, joins the Business Scholarship Podcast to discuss his article Financing Minority Entrepreneurship. In this article, Berdejó examines barriers faced by minority-owned businesses and frames information asymmetry as a cause of racial disparities in entrepreneurship. He also uses this framework in explaining why policy interventions designed to foster minority-owned businesses have failed to correct those disparities. This episode is hosted by Andrew Jennings, a teaching fellow and lecturer in law at Stanford Law School.
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Jan 14, 2021 • 31min

Ep.86 – Anat Alon-Beck on Alternative Venture Capital

Episode Notes Anat Alon-Beck, assistant professor of law at Case Western Reserve University, joins the Business Scholarship Podcast to discuss her article Alternative Venture Capital: The New Unicorn Investors. In this article, Alon-Beck examines the emergence of "alternative" venture capitalists—including family offices, high-net-worth individuals, and sovereign-wealth funds—and how their participation in financing affects governance arrangements in high-growth unicorn startups. This episode is hosted by Andrew Jennings, a teaching fellow and lecturer in law at Stanford Law School. here
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Jan 4, 2021 • 0sec

Ep.85 – Biden Symposium: Enforcement & Policing

Miriam Baer, professor of law at Brooklyn Law School; Jacob Elberg, associate professor of law at Seton Hall University; and Karen Woody, associate professor of law at Washington & Lee University, join the Business Scholarship Podcast to discuss Enforcement & Policing as part of the Financial and Corporate Regulation in the Biden Administration symposium. Related to the panel conversation, Baer is the author of Compliance Elites and Sorting Out White-Collar Crime; Elberg is the author of A Path to Data-Driven Health Care Enforcement and Health Care Fraud Means Never Having to Say You're Sorry. This episode is hosted by Andrew Jennings, a teaching fellow and lecturer in law at Stanford Law School.
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Jan 4, 2021 • 0sec

Ep.84 – Biden Symposium: Corporate Power

Carliss Chatman, associate professor of law at Washington & Lee University; Anthony Michael Kreis, assistant professor of law at Georgia State University; and Barak Richman, professor of law at Duke University, join the Business Scholarship Podcast to discuss Corporate Power as part of the Financial and Corporate Regulation in the Biden Administration symposium. Related to the panel conversation, Chatman is the author of Corporate Family Matters; Richman is the author of Stateless Commerce: The Diamond Network and the Persistence of Relational Exchange and How to Save Democracy From Technology: Ending Big Tech’s Information Monopoly. This episode is hosted by Andrew Jennings, a teaching fellow and lecturer in law at Stanford Law School.
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Jan 4, 2021 • 0sec

Ep.83 – Biden Symposium: Consumer Protection & Finance

Christopher Odinet, professor of law at the University of Iowa; Nitzan Packin, associate professor at Baruch College Zicklin School of Business; and Spencer Williams, associate professor of law at Golden Gate University, join the Business Scholarship Podcast to discuss Consumer Protection & Finance as part of the Financial and Corporate Regulation in the Biden Administration symposium. Related to the panel conversation, Packin is the author of In Too-Big-To-Fail We Trust: Ethics and Banking in the Era of COVID-19 and Show Me the (Data About the) Money!. This episode is hosted by Andrew Jennings, a teaching fellow and lecturer in law at Stanford Law School.
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Jan 4, 2021 • 0sec

Ep.82 – Biden Symposium: Investor Protection & Corporate Finance

Laura Posner, partner at Cohen Milstein Sellers & Toll PLLC; Jennifer Schulp, director of financial regulation studies at the Cato Institute's Center for Monetary and Financial Alternatives; and James Fallows Tierney, assistant professor at the University of Nebraska College of Law, join the Business Scholarship Podcast to discuss Investor Protection & Corporate Finance as part of the Financial and Corporate Regulation in the Biden Administration symposium. This episode is hosted by Andrew Jennings, a teaching fellow and lecturer in law at Stanford Law School.
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Jan 4, 2021 • 60min

Ep.81 – Biden Symposium: Banking & Financial Regulation

Gina-Gail Fletcher, professor of law at Duke University; Christina Skinner, assistant professor of legal studies and business ethics at the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School; and Kurt Wolfe, an associate at Troutman Pepper Hamilton Sanders LLP, join the Business Scholarship Podcast to discuss Banking & Financial Regulation as part of the Financial and Corporate Regulation in the Biden Administration symposium. Related to the panel conversation, Skinner is the author of Regulating Nonbanks: A Plan for SIFI Lite, Nonbank Credit, and Central Banks and Climate Change. This episode is hosted by Andrew Jennings, a teaching fellow and lecturer in law at Stanford Law School.
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Dec 15, 2020 • 26min

Ep.80 – Suneal Bedi and William Marra on Litigation Finance

Suneal Bedi, assistant professor of business law and ethics at Indiana University's Kelley School of Business, and William Marra, investment manager at Validity Finance, LLC, join the Business Scholarship Podcast to discuss their article The Shadows of Litigation Finance. In their article, Bedi and Marra present a normative framework for analyzing litigation finance's welfare effects, including its effects on pre-dispute contracting and commercial behavior. This episode is hosted by Andrew Jennings, a teaching fellow and lecturer in law at Stanford Law School.
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Dec 1, 2020 • 27min

Ep.79 – Felix Chang on Ethnically Segmented Markets

Felix Chang, professor of law at the University of Cincinnati, joins the Business Scholarship Podcast to discuss his article Ethnically Segmented Markets. In this article, Chang introduces the concept of ethnically segmented and misaligned markets (ESMs)–markets in which buyers and sellers are members of distinct ethnic communities–through a case study of the market for wigs and hair extensions. He observes that ESMs can be partly understood in terms of antitrust, and that they present challenges to antitrust doctrine and raise questions for interethnic equity and relations. This episode is hosted by Andrew Jennings, a teaching fellow and lecturer in law at Stanford Law School.

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