Guest For
MONDAY OCTOBER 9, 2006
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NOTE!!
Dear Members of the List &
Others: We are VERY happy to announce:
Like a
Beautiful Soaring PHOENIX - The
STREAMING OF MNN PROGRAMMING IS BACK!!
Utilizing the much improved Windows Media Player format:
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
GUEST:
(Originally Aired: 05-12-05)
ROBERT ASHFORD
Professor of Law
Syracuse University - College of Law
&
Co-Author:
Binary Economics - The New Paradigm
Law School -
Syracuse University
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
More About: ROBERT ASHFORD
Faculty and Staff
Directory






Home
>
Deans & Faculty >
Faculty Profile
Robert Ashford
Professor of Law
College of Law
Syracuse University
|
|
Biography:
B.A., University of South
Florida
J.D., Harvard University
Robert Ashford is Professor of Law at Syracuse University, College of Law.
His subjects include Binary Economics, Business Associations, Public
Corporations, Professional Responsibility and Securities Regulation. He
holds a J.D. with honors from Harvard Law School, and a B.A. with majors in
physics and English literature, graduating first in his class at the
University of South Florida. He was a Woodrow Wilson Fellow at Stanford
University where he studied English literature and creative writing. His
book
Binary Economics: the New Paradigm, (1999) with Rodney Shakespeare, is
available from the University Press of America.
Professor Ashford is the founder and principal organizer of the Section on
Socio-Economics of the Association of American Law Schools and a member of
the Editorial Board of the Journal of Socio-Economics, the academic honor
societies of Phi Kappa Phi and Sigma Pi Sigma (physics), and the American
Law Institute.
Professor Ashford has authored and co-authored articles, book chapters and
monographs on various subjects including banking, binary economics,
evidence, implied liability under federal law, professional responsibility,
public utility regulation, socio-economics, securities regulation, and tax
law. His publications include: “What is Socio-Economics,” 41 San Diego Law
Review 5 (2004) (Published as an introductory article in a Symposium edition
entitled “Teaching Law and Socioeconomics”); “Socio-Economics and
Professional Respsonsibilities in Teaching Law-Related Economic Issues, 41
San Diego Law Review 133 (2004) (Published in a Symposium edition entitled
“Teaching Law and Socioeconomics”); “The Socio-Economic Foundation of
Corporate Law and Corporate Social Responsibility” 76 Tulane Law Review 1187
(2002); “Binary Economics, Fiduciary Duties and Corporate Social
Responsibility: Comprehending Corporate Wealth Maximization for
Stockholders, Stakeholders, and Society,” 76 Tulane Law Review 1531 (2002);
"A New Market Paradigm for Sustainable Growth: Financing Broader Capital
Ownership with Louis Kelso's Binary Economics,” Volume XIV, Praxis, The
Fletcher Journal of Development Studies, pp. 25-59 (1998); "Socio-Economics:
What Is Its Place in Law Practice?" Volume 1997 Wisconsin Law Review 611
(1997); "Louis Kelso's Binary Economy," Volume 25 Journal of Socio-Economics
pp. 1-53 (1996) (available on westlaw.com in its jjsocecon data base), “The
Binary Economics of Louis Kelso: A Democratic Private Property System for
Growth and Justice,” Chapter 6 in Curing World Poverty: The New Role of
Property, (1994), John H. Miller, C.S.C., S.T.D., editor; Banking Law,
Volume 5 Banks and Securities Regulation Supplement, Matthew Bender (1993),
“The Binary Economics Louis Kelso: The Promise of Universal Capitalism,” 22
Rutgers Law Journal 3 (1990) (available on www-camlaw.rutgers.edu/publications/lawjournal/ashford.htm);
“Take What You Have Gathered From Coincidence: The Importance of Uncertainly
Analysis in Legal Inference and Probability.” 66 Boston University Law
Review 943 (1986); “Implied Causes of Action Under Federal Laws: Calling the
Court Back to Borak,” Northwestern University Law Review 227 (1984);
“Evaluating the Potential Use of a Consumer Stock Ownership Plan for
Financing the Capital Requirements of Public Utilities,” Proceedings of
fourth NARUC Biennial Regulatory Information Conference, The Ohio State
University (1984); “Negligence v. Strict Liability: The Workers Compensation
Example,” 12 Seton Hall Law Review 725 (1982) (co-authored with William G.
Johnson); “Presumptions, Assumptions and Due Process in Criminal Cases: A
Theoretical Overview.” 79 Yale Law Journal 165 (1969) (co-authored with D.M.
Risinger).
Professor Ashford's current research interests include the relationship
between socio-economic principles and the professional responsibilities of
lawyers; the fiduciary duty of inquiry in a market economy; the history of
law and economics; Federal Reserve monetary policy; Christianity and
economics, and binary economics.
Professor Ashford began law practice in the tax department of Morrison &
Foerster in San Francisco. Later he joined Louis Kelso in forming the law
firm of Kelso, Hunt, Ashford and Ludwig, and the investment banking firm
Kelso and Company where he served as Chief Operating Officer and General
Counsel. His law practice included tax, corporate law, securities
regulation, and appellate litigation. While in private practice, he was
elected President of the Barristers Club of San Francisco (1973) and a
Director of the Bar Association of San Francisco (1978).
"Binary Economics and the Case for Broader Ownership" (An earlier
version of this article was presented to The Seventh International
Post-Keynesian Workshop, June 30 - July 2, 2002, University of Missouri,
Kansas City.)
"Using
Christian Principles to Enhance Economic Theory and Practice: Louis Kelso's
Binary Economics as the More Christian and Scientific Way"
Professor Ashford is the founder and principal organizer of the
Section on Socio-Economics of the Association of American Law Schools
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
| |
|
|
| List Price: |
$47.00 |
| Price: |
$47.00 & This item ships for FREE with
Super Saver Shipping.
See details
|
Availability: Usually ships within 24 hours from Amazon.com
Only 2 left in stock--order soon (more
on the way).
7 used & new from $47.00
Edition: Hardcover
|
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Editorial Reviews
About the Author
Robert Ashford is Professor of Law at Syracuse University. Rodney
Shakespeare is a Barrister in London.
Product Description:
Binary Economics presents a new paradigm which founds a practical new
economics and a unifying new politics that enable people to understand and
realize their essential rights and responsibilities in a market economy.
This paradigm recognizes that capital has a potent productive and
distributive relationship to growth, and by democratically extending the
efficient means to acquire capital to all people using the earnings of
capital on market principles, binary economics offers many important
benefits beyond those provided by conventional economics. The authors
present this concept as new hope for solving seemingly intractable
problems of economic efficiency, distribution, and justice not solved by
conventional economic theories and practices, while enabling people to
understand and realize their essential rights and responsibilities in a
market economy. The binary paradigm allows cooperation with governments to
make modest reforms to existing capital markets so that all people can
acquire capital using the earnings of capital and offering the market
foundation for many important benefits, including substantial, sustainable
growth; more equal opportunity and social justice; increased earning power
for the poor, working and middle class people; a greener environment;
individual autonomy; strong families and communities; strengthened
democracy; and voluntary control of population levels.--This
text refers to the
Paperback edition.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Monday October
9, 2006
10:30 - 11:30 AM / (NYC Time)
Channel 34 of the Time/Warner &Channel 110
of the RCN
Cable Television Systems in Manhattan, New York.
The Program can now be viewed on the
internet at time of cable casting at
www.mnn.org
NOTE: You must adjust viewing to reflect NYC time
& click on channel 34 at site
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------