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74 Stan. L. Rev. 515 (2022)
Corporate Governance and the Feminization of Capital

handle is hein.journals/stflr74 and id is 541 raw text is: ARTICLE
Corporate Governance and the
Feminization of Capital
Sarah C. Haan-
Abstract. At the start of the twentieth century, women made up a small proportion of
shareholders in American publicly traded companies. By 1956, women were the majority
of individual shareholders. Although this change in shareholder gender demographics
happened gradually, it was evident early in the century: Before the 1929 stock market
crash, women shareholders had come to outnumber men at some of America's largest and
most influential corporations, including AT&T, General Electric, and the Pennsylvania
Railroad. This Article synthesizes information from a range of historical sources to reveal
an overlooked narrative of corporate history-the feminization of capital, or the
transformation of American public-company shareholders from majority male to
majority female. It charts the growing proportion of women shareholders over the first
half of the twentieth century, describes the business community's response to this trend,
and explores the impact of the rise of intermediation on the gender politics of corporate
control.
Corporate law scholarship has never before acknowledged that the early decades of the
twentieth century, a transformational era in corporate law and theory, coincided with a
change in the gender composition of the shareholder class. Scholars have not considered
the possibility that shareholders' gender-which was being tracked internally at
companies, disclosed in annual reports, and publicly reported in the press-might have
' Professor of Law, Washington and Lee University School of Law. The Author thanks the
following individuals for their generous and thoughtful comments: Afra Afsharipour,
Alexandra Andhov, Margaret M. Blair, Naomi Cahn, June Carbone, Christine Sgarlata
Chung, Richard Chused, Aaron A. Dhir, Jill E. Fisch, Carola Frydman, Jeffrey N. Gordon,
Joan MacLeod Heminway, Jennifer Hill, Eric Hilt, Andrew Jennings, Kristin N. Johnson,
Nancy Levit, Ann M. Lipton, Gregory A. Mark, Veronica Root Martinez, Martha T.
McCluskey, Benjamin Means, Bill Nelson, J.S. Nelson, Chuck O'Kelley, James Park,
Elizabeth Pollman, Mark Roe, Darren Rosenblum, Noah A. Rosenblum, Laura A.
Rosenbury, D. Daniel Sokol, Faith Stevelman, Janice M. Traflet, Andrew Verstein,
Harwell Wells, Bob Wright, and Larry Zacharias. The Author gratefully acknowledges
the financial support of the Frances Lewis Law Center, and the excellent research
assistance of Franklin L. Runge, Alex Zhang, and law student Sasha Hoyt. Finally, the
Author thanks the editors of the Stanford Law Review, especially Megan R. Izzo, Taylor
Nicolas, and Danielle Tyler Roybal, for their extraordinary efforts in preparing the
Article for publication.

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