When courts ‘pierce the corporate veil’, they disregard the separateness  of the corporation and hold a shareholder responsible for the corporation’s  action as if it were the shareholder’s own. Although as a general rule the  courts are reluctant to allow corporate veil piercing, creditors of an  insolvent corporation frequently attempt to hold the shareholders liable when  they cannot obtain satisfaction from their debtor. In the United States, in  fact, piercing claims constitute the single most litigated area in corporate  law. This study clears up some of the mists hanging around the concept of  corporate veil piercing. What exactly is corporate veil piercing and in which  situations does it occur? What are the legal rules involved? Following a short  overview of the applicable law in the six legal systems that are the subject  of this study-those of Belgium, the Netherlands, France, Germany, the United  Kingdom, and the United States-the author proceeds with a more profound  analysis from a functional comparative perspective, starting from particular  situations that typically call for shareholder liability for the debts of  subsidiary companies. Among the grounds for veil piercing claims the author  discusses the following, along with the substantive and procedural law and  important cases associated with each in the six jurisdictions covered: 
 
 
  -  ;undercapitalization; 
  -  asset stripping; 
  -  undue continuing of loss-making activities; 
  -  and identification or the consideration of the corporate group as an economic  unit. 
  
  
  In the course of the presentation, a thorough analysis of legal scholarship in  the area leads to numerous applications of the various theories and doctrines  that can be brought to bear on veil piercing cases. In addition, an in-depth  discussion of the international dimension of corporate veil piercing focuses  on the question of which laws should govern the liability of a parent  corporation for the debts of its subsidiary. Throughout, the author’s clear  insight into the substantive law of veil piercing sheds light on traditional  misconceptions in the conflict of laws on the issue. She also details  initiatives undertaken by various international bodies, including the United  Nations, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, the  European Union, the International Court of Justice, and the International  Labour Organization. Dr Vandekerckhove’s study is the most  comprehensive, far-reaching, and up-to-date study of this important growing  area of corporate law practice. As such it will prove of great value to  practitioners, judges, and academics in the field, and will prove its worth  anywhere in the world where the presence of multinational corporations is felt.