Abstract
Traditional corporate governance patterns are based on the interaction among composite stakeholders and the various forms of separation between ownership and control. Stakeholders cooperate around the Coasian firm represented by a nexus of increasingly complex contracts. These well-known occurrences have been deeply investigated by growing literature and nurtured by composite empirical evidence. Apparently, unrelated network theory is concerned with the study of graphs as a representation of (a)symmetric relations between discrete objects (nodes connected by links). Network theory is highly interdisciplinary, and its versatile nature is fully consistent with the complex interactions of (networked) stakeholders, even in terms of game-theoretic patterns. The connection between traditional corporate governance issues and network theory properties is, however, still under-investigated. Hence the importance of an innovative reinterpretation that brings to “network governance”. Innovation may, for instance, concern the principal-agent networked relationships and their conflicts of interest or the risk contagion and value drivers – three core governance issues. Networks and their applications (like blockchains, P2P platforms, game-theoretic interactions or digital supply chains) foster unmediated decentralization. In decentralized digital platforms stakeholders inclusively interact, promoting cooperation and sustainability. To the extent that network properties can be mathematically measured, governance issues may be quantified and traced with recursive patterns of expected occurrences.
Highlights
Corporate governance issues and the interactions among composite stakeholders may well be represented and interpreted in graphical terms, connecting stakeholding nodes with their interactions.Even though both corporate governance and network science are well-grounded theories, their possible connections have been hardly investigated
Which are the changes in firm networks due to technology? And how traditional firms that are “going digital” interact with digitally native companies?
Which are the hub nodes and how they react to network/blockchain-driven decentralization?
Summary
Corporate governance issues and the interactions among composite stakeholders may well be represented and interpreted in graphical terms, connecting stakeholding nodes (vertices) with their interactions (links or edges). Even though both corporate governance and network science are well-grounded theories, their possible connections have been hardly investigated. Network theory is important as an additional explanatory factor of corporate governance (this being the main research question of this study) It is worth investigating since it is likely to disrupt, together with digital platforms, artificial intelligence, and blockchains, traditional (analogic) business models. A discussion with indications for future research and some critical considerations precedes the concluding remarks
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