Navigation
  • Home
  • Recent
  • Most Active
  • Popular
  • Blog
  • Credits
  • RSS
  •   Interaction
  • Register
  • Statistics
  •   Help
  • Suggestions
  • Contact Us
  • How to Edit
  • Help



  • [Edit]



    Adolf Augustus Berle, Jr. (January 271895 - February 171971) was an educator, author, and U.S. diplomat. Educated at Harvard, Berle was a member of the Paris Peace Conference after World War I, but, unhappy with the terms of the Versailles Treaty, he resigned in protest. He became a professor of corporate law at Columbia Law School in 1927 and remained on the faculty until he retiring in 1964.

    During the FDR Administration, Berle worked on the New Deal and the Good Neighbor Policy. He later served as Ambassador to Brazil from 1945 to 1946, and was a founding member of the New York State Liberal Party. In 1961, he headed a task force for President John F. Kennedy that recommended the Alliance for Progress.

    He published several books during his lifetime, including the groundbreaking work he authored with Gardiner Means called The Modern Corporation and Private Property, which was first published in 1932.

    He told The Literary Digest his name was pronounced "as if spelled burley." (Charles Earle Funk, What's the Name, Please?, Funk & Wagnalls, 1936.)


        Adolf Berle
            See also
            Bibliography

    top

    See also
    Corporate governance

    top

    Bibliography
      The Modern Corporation and Private Property (1932; 1991 ed: ISBN 0-88738-887-6) with Gardiner Means
      The 20th Century Capitalist Revolution (1954; ASIN B0006ATWVC)
      Power without Property (1959; ISBN 0-15-173349-X)
      Latin America: Diplomacy and Reality (1962; 1981 ed: ISBN 0-313-22970-8)
     
    Search more:
     

       
    Source Privacy License Download Contact Us Atlas
    Scientus.org Dictionary (Yet Another Wiki) RC : 1.39
    MIT OpenCourseWare
    This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License [copyleft]. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Adolf Berle". link