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Human Rights after Corporate Personhood offers a rich overview of current debates, and seeks to transcend the "outrage response" often found in public discourse and corporate legal theory. Through original and innovative analyses, the volume offers an alternative account of corporate juridical personality and its relation to the human, one that departs from accounts offered by public law. In addition, it explores opportunities for the application of legal personality to assist progressive projects, including, but not limited to, environmental justice, animal rights, and Indigenous land claims.

Presented accessibly for the benefit of non-specialist readers, the volume offers original arguments and draws on eclectic sources, from law and poetry to fiction and film. At the same time, it is firmly grounded in legal scholarship and, thus, serves as an essential reference for scholars, students, lawmakers, and anyone seeking a better understanding of the interface between corporations and the law in the twenty-first century.



Interdisciplinary in scope, this book draws from a range of specialized scholarship and archival research to intervene in current debates on the study of corporations.

Acknowledgments vii
Introduction: Corporate Persons, Revisited 3(20)
Jody Greene
Sharif Youssef
Part One Noble Households, Ignoble Subjects
23(90)
1 The Corporation's Neoliberal Soul?
27(25)
Matthew Titolo
2 Cosmopolitanism, Sovereignty, and the Problem of Corporate Personhood
52(25)
Joshua Barkan
3 Watched Over by Assemblages of Providential Grace
77(36)
Angela Mitropoulos
Part Two The Social Theory of the Corporation
113(62)
4 From Public Sphere to Personalized Feed: Corporate Constitutional Rights and the Challenge to Popular Sovereignty
115(26)
David Golumbia
Frank Pasquale
5 Exceptionally Gifted: Corporate Exceptionalism and the Expropriation of Human Rights
141(34)
Richard Hardack
Part Three Discipline and Guardianship
175(84)
6 Killing Corporations to Save Humans: How Corporate Personhood, Human Rights, and the Corporate Death Penalty Intersect
179(32)
Stefan Padfield
7 Already Artificial: Legal Personality and Animal Rights
211(48)
Angela Fernandez
Part Four Corporate Personification
259(66)
8 The Livestock That Therefore We Are: Two Episodes from the Prehistory of Corporate Personhood
261(27)
Scott R. Mackenzie
9 Immortal and Intangible? Corporate Metaphysics in Jacksonian America
288(37)
Peter Jaros
Contributors 325(4)
Index 329
Jody Greene is associate vice provost for Teaching and Learning and professor of Literature, Feminist Studies, and the History of Consciousness at the University of California, Santa Cruz.



Sharif Youssef is an assistant professor of English and Legal Studies at Ashoka University.