The demise of corporate insolvency law in India : the role of the courts
The subject of this thesis is the operation of corporate insolvency law in post-colonial India. Indian corporate insolvency law has been widely condemned as dysfunctional, critics complaining of extreme delays and a series of associated nartns to creditors in the disposal of formal proceedings. Surp...
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ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-5737022015-03-20T06:29:28ZThe demise of corporate insolvency law in India : the role of the courtsZweiten, Kristin van2012The subject of this thesis is the operation of corporate insolvency law in post-colonial India. Indian corporate insolvency law has been widely condemned as dysfunctional, critics complaining of extreme delays and a series of associated nartns to creditors in the disposal of formal proceedings. Surprisingly little is known, however, about why the law has 'failed' creditors in this way - why the law operates as it does. That is the question that motivates this thesis. The thesis reports the results of an in-depth study of the introduction and development of India's two principal insolvency procedures for corporate debtors: liquidation (under the Companies Act 1956) and rescue (under the Sick Industrial Companies (Special Provisions) Act 1985, for industrial companies). The most significant contribution made by the thesis is the reporting of new evidence of the influence of judges on the development of these two insolvency procedures over time, drawn from an original analysis of a large body of Indian case law. This evidence suggests that the role of the courts (or more specifically, the role of judges) has been significantly underestimated in previous attempts to explain the demise of corporate insolvency law in post-colonial India. WORD COUNT: 99,939 (including footnotes and appendices)346.078University of Oxfordhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.573702Electronic Thesis or Dissertation |
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346.078 Zweiten, Kristin van The demise of corporate insolvency law in India : the role of the courts |
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The subject of this thesis is the operation of corporate insolvency law in post-colonial India. Indian corporate insolvency law has been widely condemned as dysfunctional, critics complaining of extreme delays and a series of associated nartns to creditors in the disposal of formal proceedings. Surprisingly little is known, however, about why the law has 'failed' creditors in this way - why the law operates as it does. That is the question that motivates this thesis. The thesis reports the results of an in-depth study of the introduction and development of India's two principal insolvency procedures for corporate debtors: liquidation (under the Companies Act 1956) and rescue (under the Sick Industrial Companies (Special Provisions) Act 1985, for industrial companies). The most significant contribution made by the thesis is the reporting of new evidence of the influence of judges on the development of these two insolvency procedures over time, drawn from an original analysis of a large body of Indian case law. This evidence suggests that the role of the courts (or more specifically, the role of judges) has been significantly underestimated in previous attempts to explain the demise of corporate insolvency law in post-colonial India. WORD COUNT: 99,939 (including footnotes and appendices) |
author |
Zweiten, Kristin van |
author_facet |
Zweiten, Kristin van |
author_sort |
Zweiten, Kristin van |
title |
The demise of corporate insolvency law in India : the role of the courts |
title_short |
The demise of corporate insolvency law in India : the role of the courts |
title_full |
The demise of corporate insolvency law in India : the role of the courts |
title_fullStr |
The demise of corporate insolvency law in India : the role of the courts |
title_full_unstemmed |
The demise of corporate insolvency law in India : the role of the courts |
title_sort |
demise of corporate insolvency law in india : the role of the courts |
publisher |
University of Oxford |
publishDate |
2012 |
url |
http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.573702 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT zweitenkristinvan thedemiseofcorporateinsolvencylawinindiatheroleofthecourts AT zweitenkristinvan demiseofcorporateinsolvencylawinindiatheroleofthecourts |
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1716797936520658944 |