Michael Klausner
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Michael Klausner | |
---|---|
Born | 1954 (age 69–70) |
Nationality | American |
Education | University of Pennsylvania (BA) Yale University (MA, JD) |
Occupation | Law professor |
Spouse | Barbara Sih Klausner |
Michael Klausner (born 1954) is the Nancy and Charles Munger Professor of Business and Professor of Law at Stanford Law School. He has been a member of the Stanford Law School faculty since 1997.[1] He works in the areas of corporate law, corporate governance, and financial regulation.
Education
Klausner graduated
Yale Law Journal.[2]
Academic and professional career
After finishing law school in 1981, Klausner clerked for Justice
White House Fellow in the Office of Policy Development under George H. W. Bush. In 1991, he joined the New York University School of Law
faculty as a professor until 1997 when he became a professor at Stanford.
Key works
- Michael Klausner, Outside Director Liability, 58 Stanford Law Review 1055 (2006). (with Bernard Black and Brian Cheffins)
- Michael Klausner, Outside Director Liability: A Policy Analysis, 162 Journal of Institutional and Theoretical Economics 5 (2006). (with Bernard S. Black and Brian R. Cheffins)
- Michael Klausner, When Time Isn't Money: Foundation Payouts and the Time Value of Money, 41 Exempt Organization Tax Review 421-428 (September 2003).
- Robert M. Daines and Michael Klausner, Do IPO Charters Maximize Firm Value? Antitakeover Protection in IPOs, 17 Journal of Law, Economics, & Organization 83-120 (April 2001).
- Michael Klausner, Corporations, Corporate Law, and Networks of Contracts, 81 Virginia Law Review 757-852 (1995).