‘The two volumes of the work are weighty in terms of their content. It is advantageous that the reprints reflect the original publication style, most convenient for accurate citation. Overall, the chapters and the themes of the work are usefully summarised in the detailed and highly analytical introduction by the editor, in which there is a wealth of reference material and further sources provided in all of the chapters in the various sections and which would repay careful study. . . this is a serious work for the legal historian and the comparative lawyer, whether academic, practitioner or judge, who wishes to be informed of the history and modern development in the jurisdiction that gave the term “corporate governance” its genesis and which has led to corporate governance assuming a central place in the business world and in the thoughts of commentators.’