
Business Law: News Releases and In the News


Ajunwa: Was Crowdstrike's meltdown negligent or foreseeable?

Jennings: The taint of corporate criminal conviction

Simon: SCOTUS bankruptcy ruling won’t eliminate Texas two-step in mass torts

Georgiev: Workplace issues are becoming a board-level concern

Georgiev testifies before Senate Climate Change Task Force

Georgiev comments on Exxon shareholders' climate protest

Jennings explains Trump's NYC criminal trial involving hush money, falsified business records

Shepherd: How GA legislation could affect plaintiffs in trucking, landowner cases

Simon: Prison bankruptcy case will test 'Texas Two-Step'

Simon comments on unusual SCOTUS stay in Boy Scouts bankruptcy settlement

Georgiev: 1st Amendment claims in California climate suit 'speculative'

Georgiev: SEC climate rule would benefit investors, markets

Georgiev comments on mandatory retirement policies for GCs

Georgiev: No court has invalidated an SEC rule for exceeding disclosure authority

Georgiev testifies in House clash over SEC climate rule

Georgiev: SEC haș authority to implement climate disclosure rule

Watch video of Georgiev's testimony at House Committee hearing

Georgiev rebuts GOP stance that SEC climate rule exceeds agency authority

Simon: Giuliani likely can’t discharge $148 million jury award

Simon: Purdue case spotlights corporate bankruptcy legal dodge

Georgiev: Beware of greenwashing in company climate disclosures

Georgiev: Asset managers don't focus on executive pay

Jennings: UAE banks' lending practices would raise flags in U.S.

Georgiev comments on SEC cyberattack disclosure rule

Acevedo: In the battle for tenure, words matter

Georgiev: US bosses enjoyed big pay rises in 2022 despite falling stock market

Georgiev: New SEC rule gauges CEO pay vs. performance

Ford Foundation funds Georgiev’s ongoing research on workforce issues in corporate law
Emory Law Associate Professor George S. Georgiev is among a select group of researchers who recently received funding from the Ford Foundation, as part of a far-reaching project on how some of the biggest companies in the United States manage and compensate their employees.

Georgiev: Companies wary of climate litigation risk

Georgiev comments on JP Morgan clawback attempt

Johnson: FTX collapse highlights need for crypto regulation

Georgiev on Tesla's shareholder lawsuit trial regarding Musk's compensation package

Georgiev: Regulators should finally require some transparency of large private firms

Georgiev discusses research in human capital management in US corporate law

Green group cites Georgiev’s support of proposed SEC climate disclosure rule

Georgiev: Recent Supreme Court decision has little effect on SEC climate disclosure proposal

Georgiev in The Guardian: SEC climate disclosure rule is central to capital markets

Holbrook: SCOTUS should correct Fed. Circuit on patent disclosures

Holbrook brief says new patent requirement could slow medical research

Georgiev: SEC climate proposal doesn't implicate major questions doctrine

Georgiev: Proposed SEC climate rule doesn't violate 1st Amendment

Georgiev’s research on materiality discussed at SEC Investor Advisory Committee Meeting

Senate unanimously confirms Johnson as CFTC commissioner
Emory Law’s Kristin N. Johnson, Asa Griggs Candler Professor of Law, was unanimously confirmed by the U.S. Senate to serve a three-year term as a commissioner of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission.

Georgiev's research featured on Harvard Law School Forum on Corporate Governance

Georgiev on the Voices of Corporate Governance podcast

Georgiev on the public-private divide

Brown: How tax code's racial bias affects generational wealth

Brown: How the tax code preserves white wealth

Brown: Options for struggling taxpayers

Georgiev's research cited in SEC commissioner's speech

Georgiev: SEC's proposed climate disclosure has social, financial relevance

Levine: New JM concentrations in employment, data privacy

Georgiev critiques critics of SEC's climate disclosure proposal

Brown: Tax subsidies created with white taxpayers in mind

Brown: Don't go after low-income tax payers to solve the tax gap

Georgiev discusses public-private divide in securities law

Georgiev: SEC may follow Europe, require more disclosures from private companies

Georgiev: SEC likely to push companies for more workforce disclosures

Satz: Private employers can mandate COVID-19 vaccinations

Georgiev quoted on executive pay at car start-up

Smith: SCOTUS ruling on California donor disclosure doesn't offer standard

Georgiev authors comment letter to the SEC on ESG disclosure

Center for Transactional Law and Practice names 2021 Tina Stark Award winners
Emory’s Center for Transactional Law and Practice has named George W. Kuney and Carol Morgan the 2021 winners of the Tina L. Stark Award for Excellence in the Teaching of Transactional Law and Skills.

Brown: CEO pay increased while their companies cut staff
Unemployment numbers don't tell full story of companies’ current labor challenges, Asa Griggs Candler Professor of Law says on "Morning Joe." A recent Pew study showed that two thirds of Americans "are thinking about what they want to do going forward," Brown said. "Do they want reexamine their field and their occupation?" Also, the unemployment rate is 9.1 percent for Black Americans, compared to 5.8 percent overall. Also overlooked is "while they're cutting staff, CEO pay has increased."

SCOTUS Analysis: Ford Motor Co. and personal jurisdiction
The ultimate impact of Ford, then, is unclear. Despite unanimity on the result, the Court did not speak with one voice.

Johnson: Fintechs Need Strong Consumer Protections, Diversity, Inclusion Asserts Key Congressman
The U.S. House Committee on Financial Services Subcommittee on Consumer Protection and Financial Institutions requested testimony from Emory Law Asa Griggs Professor of Law Kristin Johnson, in the virtual hearing "Banking Innovation or Regulatory Evasion? Exploring Trends in Financial Institution Charters."

Johnson testifies in House Subcommittee hearing on banking regulation
The U.S. House Committee on Financial Services Subcommittee on Consumer Protection and Financial Institutions requested testimony from Emory Law Asa Griggs Professor of Law Kristin Johnson, in the virtual hearing "Banking Innovation or Regulatory Evasion? Exploring Trends in Financial Institution Charters."

Satz: Could states, employers require COVID-19 vaccinations?
COVID vaccinations are currently being administered under emergency conditions to quell a worldwide pandemic. But going forward, could employers or schools require proof of vaccination? " I think there would be some legal risk to an employer that chose to make a vaccine mandatory," Emory Law Professor Ani Satz tells Fox 5 Atlanta. "But I think there's some legal arguments to support that choice."

Shepherd: Judges who were prosecutors, corporate lawyers, more likely to rule against workers
Emory Law Professor Joanna Shepherd's recently released study "Jobs, Judges, and Justice" found judges who were previously prosecutors or corporate lawyers "are significantly more likely than other types of lawyers to rule against workers as judges." She spoke with NPR about the impact of diversity on the bench.

Price: Why don't people quarantine? They aren't being paid
Conflicts over remote work and leave are the most common type of COVID-19 employment litigation in the United States, according to The Atlantic. Asa Griggs Candler Professor of Law Polly Price was quoted in a story about how to contain COVID-19 until widespread vaccination is achieved. Isolating those who are exposed is effective, but enforcing it is difficult. "We don't really pay people to stay at home to quarantine," Price said.

Holbrook: Supreme Court LBGTQ ruling provides national protection
Professor Timothy Holbrook was among several Georgia attorneys asked by the Daily Report to comment on the U.S. Supreme Court ruling that extended workplace discrimination protections to the LGBTQ community. "My initial reaction is surprise both at the outcome and at the vote. I thought the court would reject protections for the LBGT community," Holbrook said. "We now have national, non-discrimination protection for LBGTQ persons. It has always been the concern that our protections were patchwork depending on the states and cities. That’s no longer the case."

Koops hired as assistant director for Center for Transactional Law and Practice
Emory Law welcomes Katherine M. Koops as assistant director of its Center for Transactional Law and Practice.