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Bundle: Securities Regulation: Cases and Materials, Tenth Edition and Securities Regulation: Selected Statutes, Rules, and Forms 2024 Supplement

Authors
  • James D. Cox
  • Robert W. Hillman
  • Donald C. Langevoort
  • Ann M. Lipton 
Series / Aspen Bundle Series
Teaching Materials
NO
Description

Print Bundle - This bundle includes both print and digital versions of ISBN 9781543838473 and a digital-only version of supplement ISBN 9798892077538.

Digital Bundle - This bundle includes a digital-only version of ISBN 9781543849752 and a digital-only version of supplement ISBN 9798892077538.

 

More about Securities Regulation: Cases and Materials, the Tenth Edition encompasses the sea changes that have recently occurred in the securities laws and capital markets, brought about by both SEC rulemaking and shifts in underwriting practices. The casebook carries forward its long-held standard of providing students with an in-depth, sophisticated, practical look at contemporary securities law. As it has since its first edition, this volume contains a highly teachable mix of problems, cases, and textual material, encouraging students to build their knowledge base by being active problem-solvers. Always forward-thinking, stressing current developments and controversies, the book is also highly modular, so that professors can easily pick and choose how to structure their courses without being locked into any given progression.


Bundle also includes Securities Regulation: Selected Statutes, Rules, and Forms 2024 Supplement.

 


 
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About the authors
James D. Cox
Professor
Duke University

James D. Cox, Brainerd Currie Professor of Law at Duke University, specializes in the areas of corporate and securities law. In addition to his texts, Financial Information, Accounting, and the Law: Cases and Materials, Corporations and Other Business Organizations: Cases and Materials (with Eisenberg), and Securities Regulations: Cases and Materials (with Hillman, Lipton & Langevoort), and his multi-volume treatise Cox and Hazen on Corporations, he has published extensively in the areas of market regulation and corporate governance and has testified before the U.S. House and Senate on insider trading, class actions, and market reform issues.

Cox’s memberships have included the American Law Institute, the ABA Committee on Corporate Laws, the NYSE Legal Advisory Committee, the NASD Legal Advisory Board, and the Fulbright Law Discipline Review Committee. In 2009, he was appointed to the Bipartisan Policy Center's credit rating agency task force and most recently was a member of the Center’s Capital Market Task Force. Since 2009, he has been a member of the Standing Advisory Group for the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board.

In 2001, he was awarded an Honorary Doctorate of Mercature from the University of Southern Denmark for his work in international securities law. Cox and Hazen on Corporations won the Association of American Publishers National Book Award for Best New Professional/Scholarly Legal Book for 1995. He served as a member of the corporate law drafting committees in California (1977-80) and North Carolina (1984-93).

Cox joined the Duke Law faculty in 1979 after teaching at the law schools of Boston University, the University of San Francisco, the University of California, Hastings College of the Law, and Stanford. During the 1988-89 academic year, he was a Senior Research Fulbright Fellow at the University of Sydney. He earned his B.S. from Arizona State University and law degrees at the University of California, Hastings College of the Law (J.D.), and Harvard Law School (LL.M.).

Robert W. Hillman
University of California, Davis

Robert W. Hillman is a Professor of Law and Fair Business Practices and Investor Advocacy Chair at the University of California, Davis School of Law. "The road to practicing law internationally begins at home," said Robert Hillman. "The essential prerequisite for becoming a private international lawyer is a solid grounding in domestic law. Take as many business law courses as possible without regard to whether they have a domestic or international orientation. Knowing how transactions are structured, having the ability to draft documents, to negotiate effectively and to close a business deal—these do not vary whether you're practicing domestically or internationally."

Before coming to King Hall, Hillman was general counsel for Star-Kist Foods, a job that took him throughout Southeast Asia, West Africa, Latin America, and Europe. After joining the UC Davis faculty in 1984, he evaluated Chinese law schools as a consultant for the World Bank and taught two semesters at the University of International Business and Economics in Beijing. He has also taught at New York University, Duke, Georgia, and Florida State.

The job of the private international lawyer is neither easy nor glamorous, he said. "There are long hours on the road, negotiating in stressful environments without the support mechanisms you would have at home. On the other hand, there's a diversity about what you're doing that is not to be found in domestic practice. And your working environments are certainly different and stimulating."

Donald C. Langevoort
Georgetown University

Donald Langevoort is the Thomas Aquinas Reynolds Professor of Law at Georgetown University Law Center. Prior to joining the Law Center faculty in 1999, Professor Langevoort was the Lee S. and Charles A. Speir Professor at Vanderbilt University School of Law, where he joined the faculty in 1981. The courses Professor Langevoort teaches are Contracts, Securities Regulation, various seminars on corporate and securities issues, and Corporations. Professor Langevoort has received the Paul J. Hartman Award for Excellence in Teaching at Vanderbilt. He has been a visiting professor at Harvard Law School and the University of Michigan Law School and a lecturer at the Washington College of Law, American University.

After practicing for two years at Wilmer, Cutler Pickering in Washington, D.C., he joined the staff of the U.S. Securities Exchange Commission as Special Counsel in the Office of the General Counsel. Professor Langevoort is the co-author, with Professors James Cox and Robert Hillman, of Securities Regulation: Cases and Materials (Aspen Publishing), and the author of a treatise entitled Insider Trading: Regulation, Enforcement and Prevention (West Group). He has also written many law review articles, a number of which seek to incorporate insights from social psychology and behavioral economics into the study of corporate and securities law and legal ethics. Professor Langevoort has testified numerous times before Congressional committees on issues relating to insider trading and securities litigation reform.

Ann M. Lipton
Professor
Tulane Law

Ann Lipton joined the Tulane Law faculty in 2015 after over a decade of practice handling securities and corporate litigation at the trial and appellate levels. Before that, Lipton clerked for U.S. Supreme Court Justice David Souter and 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals Judge Edward Becker.

As a scholar, Lipton explores corporate governance, the relationships between corporations and investors, and the role of corporations in society. Her articles have appeared in the Yale Journal on Regulation, the Journal of Corporation Law, and the Georgetown Law Journal, among other publications. She also blogs regularly for the Business Law Prof Blog (https://lawprofessors.typepad.com/business_law/).

Product Information
Edition
Tenth Edition
Publication date
2024-07-15
Copyright Year
2024
Pages
1104
Connected eBook Print + Digital Bundle
9798894100395
Digital Bundle
9798894100401
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