<i>‘A full compendium of everything a practitioner would need to know about CVAs all in one place. A text for every insolvency professional's bookshelf.’</i>
- Stewart Perry, Fieldfisher LLP, UK,
<i>‘In a world of financial turmoil, practitioners need as many tools in their toolbox as possible. This book provides a welcome guide through the legal and practical questions and hurdles that need to be overcome in order to obtain the successful implementation (or indeed the successful challenge) of a CVA.’</i>
- Felicity Toube KC, South Square, UK,
<i>‘</i>Company Voluntary Arrangements: Law and Practice<i> is the latest contribution to corporate insolvency from Professors Andrew Keay and Peter Walton, two writers who have made it their business, in the course of their distinguished careers, to bridge the gap between academic research and insolvency law in practice. In seven comprehensive chapters they cover the genesis, nature, law and practice of CVAs and examine their close relative, the moratorium, in a welcome contribution to the </i>Elgar Corporate and Insolvency Law and Practice<i> series.’</i>
- Stephen Baister, Three Stone, UK,
Keay and Walton outline how CVAs can enable an insolvent company to come to terms with its situation and agree a way forward with its creditors. With a focus on the law in England and Wales, they assess the relevant procedure, investigating how the pertinent provisions in the Insolvency Act 1986 and the Insolvency Rules 2016 have been interpreted and applied. The book further examines the critical case law that has developed since the introduction of CVAs in 1986.
Key Features:
- Combines cutting-edge research with detailed analysis on the legal nature of CVAs
Explores the role of insolvency practitioners and other stakeholders in commencing and running a CVA- Sheds light on the professional regulatory framework and considers how different creditors are impacted by CVAs
Company Voluntary Arrangements is an essential resource for practitioners and policymakers in company and insolvency law, as well as corporate law and governance. It will also greatly benefit academics studying corporate and insolvency law.