Shareholder litigation and class action suits play a key role in
protecting investors and regulating big businesses. But Directors and
Officers liability insurance shields corporations and their managers
from the financial consequences of many illegal acts, as evidenced by
the recent Enron scandal and many of last year's corporate financial
meltdowns. Ensuring Corporate Misconduct demonstrates for the first
time how corporations use insurance to avoid responsibility for
corporate misconduct, dangerously undermining the impact of securities
laws.
As Tom Baker and Sean J. Griffith demonstrate, this need not be the
case. Opening up the formerly closed world of corporate insurance, the
authors interviewed people from every part of the industry in order to
show the different instances where insurance companies could step in and
play a constructive role in strengthening corporate governance--yet
currently do not. Ensuring Corporate Misconduct concludes with a set
of readily implementable reforms that could significantly rehabilitate
the system.