Dan M. McGill, Editor
As pension plan assets have grown in magnitude, some argue that the assets could – and perhaps should – be invested in a manner that would achieve goals beyond the maximization of return within given risk parameters. This 1984 book examines the early arguments, pro and con, for social investing.
1984 · Richard D. Irwin, Inc. · ISBN 0-256-03170-3
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- Download Preface & Table of Contents
- Chapter 1: Pension Funds and Social Investments: A Tale of Two Cities
Clarence C. Walton - Chapter 2: Legal Restrictions on Social Investing
James D. Hutchinson and Paul J. Ondrasik, Jr. - Chapter 3: Evolving Role of Labor in Pension Fund Investment
Jack Sheinkman - Chapter 4: Investment of Pension Funds–The Concerns of Organized Labor
John H. Lyons - Chapter 5: Pension Fund Investments: Union Goals
Howard Young - Chapter 6: Implementation of a Social Investment Policy–as Exemplified by a State Retirement System
Madelon DeVoe Talley - Chapter 7: Capital Market Theory Perspectives
Randolph Westerfield - Chapter 8: Decision Making for Social Investing
Tamar Frankel