Corporatization and Corporate Social Responsibility : Insurance Banking Industrial Design Ownership and Control
Contents: Foreword. Preface. I. Corporate social responsibility and corporate Governance: 1.Corporate social responsibility: the need of the hour/Z.U. Khairoowala and Nawab Ali Khan. 2. Corporate social responsibilities: an analysis in Indian context/Dipak Das. 3. Corporate social empowerment or being empowered and doing empowerment preface to an ethical monitoring of the capability approach/Arnab Chatterjee. 4. Corporate social responsibility: the Indian trend/Partha Sarathi Adhya. 5. Corporate social responsibility: in Indian perspective/Tapan Kumar Samanta. 6. Corporate social responsibility/Manali Singhal and Ujjvalya Anand. 7. Corporate Governance in India: an overview/Pradeep Kumar Pandey. 8. CSR and performance of Indian companies/Rajib Mallik. 9. Corporate social responsibility: a critical study/Sanjeev Kumar Tiwari. II. Insurance: 10. Insurance against third party risks: an overview/Sanjay Kumar Singh. 11. Insurance and its importance: an critical analysis/Ruchita Chakraborty. 12. Compounding of offences: mechanism to reduce litigation or escape from prosecution/Kohinoor Roy. 13. Damage to property and remedies under insurance law: an appraisal/Sangeeta Mandal. III. Ownership control and WTO: 14. The separation of ownership and control: a new dimension for business success/Bhagirathi Panigrahi. 15. Dumping and WTO: an analysis/Arbind Chakraborty. IV. Industrial design: 16. Industrial design : its growth, essentials and nature of protection as a form of intellectual property/Avishek Chakraborty. V. Safe and standard food: 17. Consumers right to safe and standard food/Ashok R. Patil. VI. Banking: 18. Development of co operative banking sector in India/Jagdip U. Nanavaty. VII. Company and equity investment: 19. The companies bill 2008: a boost for the equity investment in India/J.K. Singh. 20. Voluntary winding up of company: an appraisal/Ashutosh Kumar Shah. 21. Power of court to wind up company: an overview/Biresh Prasad. Index.
Companies and big corporate houses are responsible for generating the majority of world economic activity. They are prominent players in all market ranging from commodities, merchandise goods and services to capital and resources. So, the corporations and corporate law, which have remained the maters of domestic policy interest for many decades, have moved to forefront of international thinking with the gradual saturation of global economics. There is a growing interaction among different stakeholders with corporate law and the ways to cope up with increasingly dynamic business paradigm. It has become more critical as companies operate in an increasingly complex corporate environment.
This scholarly work is both broad in scope and extremely rich in detail. The readers will find this a useful reference book as well as a general text for scholar researcher of management studies and law students specializing in corporate law for there under graduate and post graduate studies.