Corporations do not vote in elections, but their impact on democratic societies is immense. The Corporations and Democracy Conference will bring together scholars and practitioners in various areas of law, business, and the media to examine the complex interactions and balance of power among corporations, governments, and individuals in democracies today and consider how those with power can be held more accountable to society’s broad interest.
The conference is sponsored by the at Stanford Graduate School of Business, in collaboration with the at Stanford University, , the at The University of Chicago Booth School of Business, the at Columbia Law School, the Division of Research and Faculty Development at , and the at the University of Oxford.
Agenda
DAY 1: December 7, 9:00am – 12:30pm PST
Corporation and Political Voice
Welcome and Introduction — 9:00am – 9:15am PST
, Stanford Graduate School of Business
, Stanford Graduate School of Business
, Stanford Law School
Corporate Legal Rights and Democracy — 9:15am – 10:35am PST
, University of Pennsylvania Carey School of Law
, UCLA School of Law
Moderator: , Chapman University Dale E. Fowler School of Law
Corporations are abstract persons. What legal rights have corporations gained and how? What rights should corporations have so that they can best serve the needs of democratic societies? How do we ensure that corporations do not expand their rights excessively or abuse them?
Corporations and Money in Politics — 10:50am – 12:25pm PST
, The University of Chicago Booth School of Business
, Center for Political Accountability
, Columbia University School of International and Public Affairs
Moderator: , Stanford Graduate School of Business
How do corporations and their leaders use money to impact key democratic outcomes such as elections and policy? To what extent does corporate lobbying and other forms of spending distort democracy? What actions might correct these distortions?
Wrap Up — 12:25pm – 12:30pm PST
DAY 2: December 8, 9:00am - 12:20pm PST
Corporate Influence and Democratic Decision Making
Welcome — 9:00am – 9:05am PST
Expertise, Incentives, and “Thin Political Markets” — 9:05am – 10:40am PST
, University of Oxford Blavatnik School of Government
, Duke University School of Law
, Imperial College London
Moderator: , Stanford Graduate School of Business
Thin political markets arise in areas where the issues have low salience to the general public and special interests have tacit knowledge that is relevant to policy. How might policy outcomes get distorted in these thin political markets? What are the incentives of experts, including those from academia, when they participate in policymaking? How can we mitigate special-interest capture?
Corporations, Media, and Truth — 10:55am – 12:15pm PST
, Financial Times
, Stanford Law School
Moderator: , Harvard Business School
How well do traditional media outlets inform the public and help hold those with power in corporations and in government accountable? What is the impact of internet platforms and social media on democratic discourse? How might we balance free speech with the need for truth to inform citizens in a democracy?
Wrap Up — 12:15pm – 12:20pm PST
DAY 3: December 9, 9:00am – 12:30pm PST
Corporations and Democratic Accountability
Welcome — 9:00am – 9:05am
Corporations, Corruption and Democracy — 9:05am – 10:40am PST
, New York University School of Law
, United States Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York
, The University of Chicago Booth School of Business
Moderator: , Stanford University
International corruption threatens democracies everywhere. Oligarchs and others attempting to preserve their ill-gotten gains use financial institutions in developed economies in corruptive ways. How well do anti-money laundering laws and anti-bribery laws deal with these challenges? This session will discuss a specific case involving European corporations helping a corrupt Nigerian politician.
Corporations and the Justice System — 10:55am – 12:25pm PST
, Stanford Graduate School of Business
, Duke University School of Law
, University of Michigan Law School
Moderator: , Stanford Law School
Does the justice system, including law enforcement, hold those with power properly accountable when they cause substantial and preventable harms to others? Is there equal justice under the law in the corporate context? If not, what must change in the laws and in the institutions and mechanisms of law enforcement to achieve more just outcomes?
Wrap Up — 12:25pm – 12:30pm PST
Open to
Faculty, Staff, Students, Stanford Community, Alumni, Public
MEDIA CONTACT
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Paul Pfleiderer
Professor of Finance
Stanford Graduate School of BusinessAnat R. Admati
Professor of Economics (by courtesy), School of Humanities and Sciences Senior Fellow, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research
Stanford Graduate School of Business