Dan,
Thanks for picking up my obvious error on the acidity note.
Re: stereoelectronic effects
Clearly we can find them in many reactions. The Hoffmann rearrangement is sensitive to the orientation of the oxime and can give different products from each. I believe the pinacol does also, but I am not familiar with any bona fide results to quote.
If anyone is paying attention, you can discern that I like to group things together. While I wouldn't normally link the stereoelectronic demands of a Hoffmann rearrangement with a hypobromite oxidation, I would if that was the best I could do. I think very carefully about how a pair of electrons react. How are the non-bonded electrons of hydronium ion different from hydroxide or water? They have the same charge (-2). I find it comes to distance which is compatible with the inverse square law.
Clearly, I was being methodical in suggesting a pinacol rearrangement as it placed a leaving group on a carbon beta to migrating group. You simply expanded this to consider other mechanistically similar reactions. I think when this is done in a general case such as this, then we should find most reactions have some kind of precedence or expectations as to what might occur. The suitability, it seems to me, would be the similarity of the driving forces in a reaction. If you have a migration due to a pushing from a lone pair of electrons, a quite different result may (not will) occur in the absence of the lone pair.