Publication details
Podílnické společnosti jako předstupeň demokracie: kapitola z dějin veřejné volby
| Basic information | |
|---|---|
| Original title: | Podílnické společnosti jako předstupeň demokracie: kapitola z dějin veřejné volby |
| Title in English: | Joint Stock Company as a Precursor of Democracy: A Chapter from the History of Public Choice |
| Author: | František Svoboda |
| Further information | |
|---|---|
| Citation: | SVOBODA, František. Podílnické společnosti jako předstupeň
demokracie: kapitola z dějin veřejné volby (Joint Stock Company
as a Precursor of Democracy: A Chapter from the History of
Public Choice). Scientia et Societas, Praha: Newton Books,
a.s., 2012, vol. 9, No 2, p. 124 -133. ISSN 1801 -7118.Export BibTeX |
| Original language: | Czech |
| Field: | Management and administrative |
| Type: | Article in Periodical |
| Keywords: | veřejná politika; public choice; public debt; joint stock company |
If we accept the definition that public choice is a process in which the preferences of individuals are combined into collective decisions, then we can regarded joint stock companies of medieval and early modern times as a precursor of the system of representative democracy, at least in terms of practical verification of system functionality elected representatives looking out for the common good. The most important principles of these companies were perpetual succession of shares, the existence of common seal, confirming the corporate will of the shareholders, the management elected by shareholders, internal self-government framing of By-Law, a limited liability company and the shareholder voting rights. This article will therefore be devoted to one of the most important example of the first joint stock company, Genoa Corporation of San Giorgio, which is in the early modern period contributed significantly to governance and balancing private and public interests.
If we accept the definition that public choice is a process in which the preferences of individuals are combined into collective decisions, then we can regarded joint stock companies of medieval and early modern times as a precursor of the system of representative democracy, at least in terms of practical verification of system functionality elected representatives looking out for the common good. The most important principles of these companies were perpetual succession of shares, the existence of common seal, confirming the corporate will of the shareholders, the management elected by shareholders, internal self-government framing of By-Law, a limited liability company and the shareholder voting rights. This article will therefore be devoted to one of the most important example of the first joint stock company, Genoa Corporation of San Giorgio, which is in the early modern period contributed significantly to governance and balancing private and public interests.
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