Professor Stephanie Ben-Ishai, a Full Professor at Osgoode Hall Law School, is an internationally recognized expert on insolvency, corporate governance and commercial law. A frequent guest speaker, Professor Ben-Ishai has presented her work around the world. She has received the American Bankruptcy Institute Medal of Excellence, SSHRC and Fulbright fellowships. In 2013 Professor Ben-Ishai was the Law Commission of Ontario Scholar in Residence where she continued her research on debt relief. Previously she served as an INSOL International Scholar and was awarded the Osgoode Hall Law School Research Fellowship for her insolvency research. Professor Ben-Ishai's research has been consistently supported by a range of internal and external grants, including SSHRC Grants. Professor Ben-Ishai has served as the editor of leading Canadian and Australian commercial law journals and is an active member of a number of Canadian and international professional, community and academic boards and committees. She is the author and co-author/co-editor of six books on insolvency and contract law and over 40 articles on insolvency, commercial and corporate law. She has been active in commercial law reform and has been consulted by governments and self-regulatory organizations on insolvency and commercial law matters. Professor Ben-Ishai has also acted as an expert on Ontario and Canadian law.Professor Ben-Ishai is the Academic Director of the LLM in Bankruptcy and Insolvency Law, Co-Academic Director of the LLM in Banking Law and the Academic Director of the Osgoode Small Business Clinic. Research Interests: Corporate/Commercial Law
Set up email alerts to be notified when this author's
articles are cited by new articles added to HeinOnline here (use a semicolon to separate multiple email addresses):
Professor Stephanie Ben-Ishai, a Full Professor at Osgoode Hall Law School, is an internationally recognized expert on insolvency, corporate governance and commercial law. A frequent guest speaker, Professor Ben-Ishai has presented her work around the world. She has received the American Bankruptcy Institute Medal of Excellence, SSHRC and Fulbright fellowships. In 2013 Professor Ben-Ishai was the Law Commission of Ontario Scholar in Residence where she continued her research on debt relief. Previously she served as an INSOL International Scholar and was awarded the Osgoode Hall Law School Research Fellowship for her insolvency research. Professor Ben-Ishai's research has been consistently supported by a range of internal and external grants, including SSHRC Grants. Professor Ben-Ishai has served as the editor of leading Canadian and Australian commercial law journals and is an active member of a number of Canadian and international professional, community and academic boards and committees. She is the author and co-author/co-editor of six books on insolvency and contract law and over 40 articles on insolvency, commercial and corporate law. She has been active in commercial law reform and has been consulted by governments and self-regulatory organizations on insolvency and commercial law matters. Professor Ben-Ishai has also acted as an expert on Ontario and Canadian law.Professor Ben-Ishai is the Academic Director of the LLM in Bankruptcy and Insolvency Law, Co-Academic Director of the LLM in Banking Law and the Academic Director of the Osgoode Small Business Clinic. Research Interests: Corporate/Commercial Law
The multidisciplinary content found throughout HeinOnline is organized into a subject hierarchy that we call PathFinder. Powered by a combination of human curation and artificial intelligence, PathFinder assigns subjects to documents, and then organizes them into broader subjects. View the PathFinder Subjects most frequently assigned to this author's article here.
#
Cited by Articles (0-5 Years)
51
This metric counts the number of times this author has been cited by other articles in HeinOnline within the past five years only. Citation sources include the Bluebook, Prince's Bieber Dictionary of Legal Abbreviations, and the Cardiff Index to Legal Abbreviations.
This metric counts the number of times this author has been cited by other articles in HeinOnline beyond the past five years only. Citation sources include the Bluebook, Prince's Bieber Dictionary of Legal Abbreviations, and the Cardiff Index to Legal Abbreviations.
Cited by Cases (0-5 Years)
0
This metric counts the number of times this author has been cited by cases available in HeinOnline or via Fastcase within the past five years only.
Cited by Cases (5+ Years)
0
This metric counts the number of times this author has been cited by cases available in HeinOnline or via Fastcase beyond the past five years only.
Accessed (Past 12 Months)
385
This metric counts the cumulative number of times an author's articles have been accessed by HeinOnline users within a rolling 12 month period. In order for an author's article to count as accessed, the article must be clicked from either search results or by browsing to the article, or retrieved using the citation navigator.
ScholarRank
8,647
ScholarRank is an overall ranking based on the calculation of five HeinOnline ScholarCheck metrics. The Z-score for each of the five metrics is taken and then averaged; the final average is entered into standard competition ranking to produce the overall ScholarRank for each author. Further information on HeinOnline's ScholarRank may be found in our Knowledge Base.
Average Citations per Article
4.52
This metric counts the cumulative number of times this author has been cited by other articles, then divides this number by this author's total number of articles written, to calculate the average number of citations per article.
Average Citations per Document
3.85
This metric counts the cumulative number of times this author has been cited by other articles, then divides this number by this author's total number of documents written, to calculate the average number of citations per document.
Self-Citations
12
This metric counts the cumulative number of an author's self-citations. This metric is not currently factored into the overall ScholarCheck ranking analysis.
H-Index
6.00
The h-index is an author-level metric that attempts to measure both the productivity and citation impact of the publications of an author. The index is based on the set of the author's most cited papers and the number of citations that they have received in other publications. Further information on an h-index can be found here.