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  2. Corporations (Upper Canada) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corporations_(Upper_Canada)

    There were two types of corporations at work in the Upper Canadian economy: the legislatively chartered companies and the unregulated joint stock companies.These two business forms had different legal standing; chartered corporations had a "separate personality" - they were a legal person quite distinct from its members or shareholders, a legal fiction which protected those shareholders with ...

  3. Combines Investigation Act - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Combines_Investigation_Act

    It prohibited monopolies, misleading advertising, bid-rigging, price fixing, and other means of limiting competition. First introduced in 1910, [ 1 ] the original legislation was repealed before an updated version was enacted in 1923 by MacKenzie King ; [ 2 ] the Act was also amended in 1969 by the Criminal Law Amendment Act , 1968–69 .

  4. John Kenneth Galbraith - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Kenneth_Galbraith

    The social cost of this monopoly power is a decrease in both allocative efficiency and the equity of income distribution. This conventional economic analysis of the role of monopoly power did not adequately address popular concern about the large corporation in the late 1960s.

  5. Criticisms of corporations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Criticisms_of_corporations

    The notion of a legally sanctioned corporation remains controversial for several reasons, most of which stem from the granting of corporations both limited liability on the part of its members and the status and rights of a legal person. Some opponents to this granting of "personhood" to an organization with no personal liability contend that ...

  6. Oppression remedy in Canadian corporate law - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oppression_remedy_in...

    Provisions similar to s. 210 of the UK Companies Act 1948 were first introduced into Canadian law through the 1975 passage of the Canada Business Corporations Act. [1] It incorporated recommendations made in 1962 by the UK Jenkins Committee on Company Law for removing the linkage of the remedy with that of winding-up and for broadening its scope. [2]

  7. Ontario Cannabis Retail Corporation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ontario_Cannabis_Retail...

    The Ontario Cannabis Retail Corporation, operating as Ontario Cannabis Store (OCS), is a Crown corporation that manages a legal monopoly over the online retail and wholesale distribution of recreational cannabis to consumers and privately operated brick and mortar retailers respectively throughout Ontario, Canada.

  8. Lobbying in Canada - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lobbying_in_Canada

    Nova Scotia was the first Canadian adopter of responsible government. Some evidence exists of relationships between Nova Scotia pre-confederation premier Charles Tupper, who prior to Confederation was a strong supporter of the interest of trans-Canada railway companies, and negotiating with the General Mining Association, which had a de facto monopoly on mining.

  9. Corporatocracy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corporatocracy

    Protester holding Adbusters' Corporate American Flag at the Second inauguration of George W. Bush in Washington, D.C.. Corporatocracy [a] or corpocracy is an economic, political and judicial system controlled or influenced by business corporations or corporate interests.