Good Governance Tools: Cross-Pollination from Nordic Corporate Law
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/12135Date
2017-11-10Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Schøning, LenaAbstract
This article aims to analyze the extent to which good governance principles applicable to Nordic
companies may be an appropriate good governance tool for a public or organizational entity.
The company is an advanced organizational invention for its purpose, and Nordic companies are
generally regarded as highly productive and well run. Nordic companies approached as smallscale
units of governance are therefore analyzed in this article as examples of the implementation
of good governance principles and practices. In Nordic corporate law, a set of self-regulatory
norms are a prominent part of what constitutes good corporate governance. The principles
underlying these self-regulatory norms are scrutinized in this article, and the Norwegian Code
of Practice for Corporate Governance is at the heart of the analysis. The norms are generally
detailed and operationalized, and as such they may serve as examples of how concerns, such as
accountability, transparency, predictability, conflicting interests and loyalty, clarity and equality,
are put into practice. The norms also advocate value and standard setting. Although there are
significant differences between the corporate sphere and the public or organizational sphere, the
similarities are in many ways greater, and corporate norms may serve as good governance tools
when scaled up to other issue domains or levels as done in this article.