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"This book elaborates and interrogates the idea of evil corporations from a diverse range of disciplines. There has long been awareness of systemic harms inflicted by corporations, but this awareness has rarely led to any effective legal means to preventand/or respond adequately to them. Lawyers and legal theorists appear to be stuck asking the same questions, and giving the same ineffective answers. Part of the problem, this book maintains, is the relative lack of theoretical interrogation into the nature of corporations as responsible, moral agents. To break this stasis, this book draws upon philosophies of wickedness in order to ask whether or not corporations are, or can be, evil. With contributions from a range of different disciplines, including law, cultural theory, theology, and philosophy, it offers a novel account of how and why corporate wrongs are caused, whilst exploring the extent to which the legal system itself facilitates such wrongdoing. The book is targeted at a broad international audience with research interests in corporate crime. This will be of particular interest to those within the legal discipline including corporate law, criminal law, corporate crime and law and humanities scholars"--

This book elaborates and interrogates the idea of evil corporations from a diverse range of disciplines.



This book elaborates and interrogates the idea of evil corporations from a diverse range of disciplines.

There has long been awareness of systemic harms inflicted by corporations, but this awareness has rarely led to any effective legal means to prevent and/or respond adequately to them. Lawyers and legal theorists appear to be stuck asking the same questions, and giving the same ineffective answers. Part of the problem, this book maintains, is the relative lack of theoretical interrogation into the nature of corporations as responsible, moral agents. To break this stasis, this book draws upon philosophies of wickedness in order to ask whether or not corporations are, or can be, evil. With contributions from a range of different disciplines, including law, cultural theory, theology, and philosophy, it offers a novel account of how and why corporate wrongs are caused, whilst exploring the extent to which the legal system itself facilitates such wrongdoing.

The book is targeted at a broad international audience with research interests in corporate crime. This will be of particular interest to those within the legal discipline including corporate law, criminal law, corporate crime and law and humanities scholars.

Introduction Penny Crofts Part 1: Doomed to be Evil? 1 Can capitalism
ever be other than evil? James Martel 2 Can a corporation be evil? Luke
Russell 3 Corporate Vice Stephanie Collins Part 2: Corporate Harms 4 Ecocide,
Evil and the Corporation Joanna Kyriakakis 5 Prescription Medicine, Adverse
Effects and Economies of Death Marc Trabsky and Jacinthe Flore 6 The
Corporate Evil of Unsafe Products: Strict liability, negligence and the
expressive force of law Hui Chia and Jeannie Paterson 7 Data Brokers: Trading
on Trust Olivia Dixon Part 3: A mechanics of corporate harms 8 Evil
Corporations in Horror Fiction Penny Crofts 9 Corporate Office, Corporate
Irresponsibility and the Constitutive Vicariousness of Corporate Power
Timothy D Peters 10 Blindness without a Will: The Dilemma of Corporate
Collective Knowledge and Intention in Succession Lisa Siraganian 11 Corporate
misuse of legal professional privilege: concealing and constituting crimes
Liz Campbell Part 4: Future approaches 12 The Monster Within: Representing
Corporate Evil Mihailis E. Diamantis 13 Corporations as Haunted Entities:
Conceptualising Responsibility for Historical Harm Penny Crofts and Honni van
Rijswijk 14 Corporate evil: a story of systems and silences Elise Bant 15
Redeeming Corporations: Designing legal interventions for complex adaptive
systems Rebecca Wallis and Simon Bronitt 16 Corporate Culture is The
Problem, but Can it be Regulated? Vicky Comino
Penny Crofts is Professor at the Faculty of Law, University of Technology Sydney, Australia.