While the photos tell stories, if cartoons, stories and share your photos. Theory suggests that the cartoons cartoons reflect public opinion in relation to issues. Thus, a useful way of measuring the cartoons and tracking public attitudes over time. This article uses a historical analysis of the cartoon track public opinion in relation to matters relating to corporate governance. In particular, he compares what cartoons reflected before the economic crash of 2008, and after that they portrayed. Narrative criteria, location, binary struggle, and regulatory programs were used as the basis for the analysis of 258 cartoons. We found that there were three major changes after 2008 crash that hold important lessons for those who run corporations: the public's concern is not so much about corporate and individual fraud, as it is about corporate and individual greed, it seems that the corporation does not do bad things so they do not do any good things, and ordinary people, workers and taxpayers are those who suffer most, when corporations are not regulated as "Hide
. by Ria Wiid, Leyland Pitt, Adam J Mills Source: Business Horizons 8 pages. Publication Date: November 15, 2012. Prod. #: BH497-PDF-ENG