facebook pixel

Emergency BU Alert Testing! This is a BU Alert test message.

Skip to Main Content
Boston University School of Law

  • Academics
  • Admissions & Aid
  • Faculty & Research
Search
  • Current Students
  • Faculty & Staff
  • Alumni
  • Employers
  • Journalists
Search
  • Academics
    • Find Degrees and Programs
    • Explore Your Options
    • Study Abroad
    • Academic Calendar
  • Admissions & Aid
    • JD Admissions
    • Graduate Admissions
    • Tuition & Fees
    • Financial Aid
    • Visits & Tours
  • Faculty & Research
    • Faculty Profiles
    • Activities & Engagements
    • Centers & Institutes
  • Experiential Learning
    • Clinics & Practicums
    • Externship Programs
    • Simulation Courses
    • Law Journals
    • Moot Court
  • Careers & Professional Development
    • Career Advising for JD Students
    • Career Advising for Graduate Students
    • Employment Statistics
    • Employment Sectors
    • Public Service Programs
  • Student Life
    • Advising & Student Support
    • Law Student Organizations
    • Living in Boston
  • Law Libraries
    • About the Libraries
    • A-Z Database List
    • Institutional Repository
  • About BU Law
    • Offices & Services
    • Meet the Dean
    • Diversity, Equity & Inclusion
    • Visit Campus
  • News & Stories
    • All Stories
    • Faculty in the News
    • Past Issues of The Record

Want to Support BU Law?Learn how you can give back


Latest Stories From The Record

Collage of images: Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson delivering the BU Law commencement address; portrait of Robert Volk; Jaimee Francis ('24) and Brianna Jordan ('24); Barbara Jones, dean of the School of Social Work and Angela Onwuachi-Willig, dean of the School of Law grabbing a selfie with BU President Melissa Gilliam
BU Law News

Reflecting on 2023

Read more
Madeline Comer (’25)
Student

BU Law Student Advocates for Survivors of Sexual Violence

Read more
Vasanth Sarathy ('10) sits in a blue chair with a robot next to him
Alumni

Drawing on Law to Study AI

Read more
Grant Owen, Emma Bowler, Alejandro Perez, and Sophie Lovering in Puerto Rico on a pro bono spring break trip in 2023.
Public Service

A “New Wave” Rises in Puerto Rico

Read more
The Record
News & Stories from BU Law
  • Issues
  • All Stories

Politics and Investment

Professor of Law David Webber discusses his research on how the fields interact to influence our society.

Professor David WebberThe roles of politics and ideology in the investment world are growing, and Professor of Law David Webber has been researching how the fields interact to influence our society.

“I think what we are seeing is people increasingly viewing the investment space as a forum for grappling with political issues,” Webber says. “The pressures of politics on investment are growing and they’re going to play an important part in twenty-first century markets.”

Webber characterizes these political pressures as either top down or bottom up. Top-down pressures are defined as demands on investment that come from political leaders. Top-down pressures might be seen, for example, in a government’s use of sovereign wealth funds—government-owned investment funds that may advance nationalist interests using their investment power. Bottom-up pressures may take the form of social movements enacting change through investment, like environmental activists pushing companies to divest from coal.

There are also increasing concerns about whether it makes sense for investors to focus only on investment returns, even to the exclusion of other economic interests. In an article for the Washington Post, Webber examined investments by public pension funds in companies that privatize public sector jobs. He found that trustees were investing the funds in, for example, private firefighting companies, which were attempting to underbid public firefighters for contracts. In other words, public firefighters were unknowingly funding, with their retirement money, the loss of their own jobs.

“I was just amazed to hear this,” Webber says. “Here were these trustees who would take public workers’ money and directly undermine the interest of these workers. Their lawyers were telling them that there was nothing they could do about it and that the law requires them to only look at returns and that’s it.”

For Webber, understanding the role business plays in society is crucial. Corporations are powerful entities, and he encourages more people to learn to understand how exactly they influence our lives.

“When you go to elementary school, middle school, and high school, you learn about voting, congress, the Supreme Court, and that’s all really important,” Webber says. “But there is widespread ignorance about how corporations function, and very little education about that topic outside of law schools or business schools.”

Webber teaches courses in shareholder activism and securities regulation, along with a first-year civil procedure course. He sees his students as a necessary part of his scholarship and research. “I love the engagement with the students,” Webber says. “They ask great questions that are sometimes unexpected and force you to think about an issue in a new way. The teaching and the research work really well together, they create synergy.”

Webber has extended his research on politics and investment in a forthcoming book on shareholder activism. Harvard University Press will publish the book in early 2018.

“In many ways, I’ve always felt that this area of law forces you to ask these really big questions about what types of decisions should be made by markets and what types of decisions should be made in the political sphere,” Webber says. “Anyone interested in politics, economics, or social justice should naturally gravitate to this field.”

Reported by Greg Yang (CAS’17).

Explore Related Topics:

  • Corporate Law
  • Research
  • Share this story

Share

Politics and Investment

Share this:

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • Issues
  • All Stories
  • About & Contact

More about School of Law

Also See

  • ABA Required Disclosures
  • Licensing Disclosures
  • Statement of Nondiscrimination

Contact Us

  • JD Admissions
  • LLM & Graduate Admissions
  • Offices & Services
  • Faculty & Staff Directory
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
© 2025 Boston University. All rights reserved. www.bu.edu
  • Current Students
  • Faculty & Staff
  • Alumni
  • Employers
  • Journalists
Search
Boston University

Boston University School of Law
765 Commonwealth Avenue Boston, MA 02215

  • © 2022 Trustees of Boston University
  • Privacy Statement
  • Accessibility
  • Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA)
Boston University Masterplate