1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910815384003321

Autore

Meredith Patricia <1955->

Titolo

Better boardrooms : repairing corporate governance for the 21st century / / Patricia Meredith

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Toronto, Ontario, Canada ; ; Buffalo, New York ; ; London, England : , : University of Toronto Press, , [2020]

©2020

ISBN

9781442621374

9781442621381

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (224 p.) : 5 figures

Classificazione

cci1icc

Disciplina

332.106840971

Soggetti

Banks and banking - Canada

Corporate governance - Canada

Bank directors - Canada

Electronic books.

Canada

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Includes index.

Nota di contenuto

; Cover -- ; Title Page -- ; Copyright Page -- ; Dedication Page -- ; Contents -- ; Preface: What Got Me Started ... -- ; 1. CIBC: A Fork in the Road -- ; 2. A Broken System -- ; 3. When Seeing Is Not Believing -- ; 4. Confronting Reality -- ; 5. What Boards Should Do, but Likely Won't -- ; 6. Barbarians at the Gates -- ; 7. Transformation: Easier Said Than Done -- ; 8. The Information Age Changes Everything -- ; 9. A New Governance Model -- ; Acknowledgments -- ; Appendix A: Timeline for GE Post Trian Partners Presentation -- ; Appendix B: Selected History of the Thomson Corporation -- ; Notes -- ; Index

Sommario/riassunto

"This is the third of three books authored by award-winning author Patricia Meredith. Her first book, Catalytic Governance: Leading Change in the Information Age (co-authored by Steve Rosell and Ged Davis) set out a process for leading transformative change, based on the authors' experience with the Canadian Task Force for the Payments System Review. Her second book, Stumbling Giants: Transforming Canada's Banks for the Information Age (winner of the 2018 Donner Prize and



co-authored with James Darroch) highlighted how ill-prepared the Canadian banks are for the technology tsunami overtaking financial services. To regain their reputation as vibrant enablers of economic growth, Better Boardrooms proposes that a broad cross-section of Canadians - policy makers and regulators, customers, suppliers, investors and, not least, bankers themselves - work together to create a banking system better suited to the twenty-first century. This new model of governance is based on a collaborative approach which ensures all relevant voices are heard. As boundaries between industries blur and stakeholders gain greater access to information, it is vital that policymakers and regulators, customers and suppliers, investors and managers work together to fix Better Boardrooms."--