Biographies
Acknowledgements
Introduction: The Meeting
Part I. Corporate Justice
1. Democracy on Trial
2. Corporate Courts
3. Secret Insurance
4. Capitalist Magna Carta
5. The Boomerang
Part II. Corporate Welfare
6. Aid-funded Business
7. Financing ‘Development’
8. Buying Power
9. Aiding Elites
10. A New Continent
Part III. Corporate Utopias
11. Fences Up
12. Irish Invasion
13. Rights Suspended
14. Private Cities
15. Finance is King
Part IV. Corporate Armies
16. Peace without Democracy
17. Profits versus Peasants
18. Private Borders
19. Private Protection
20. Lucrative Threats
Epilogue: Ugly Truths
Bibliography
Notes
Index
A journalistic exposé of the global takeover of political power by corporations, which increasingly decide how justice is defined, resources are allocated, and territories are governed
Claire Provost is co-founder and codirector of the new
non-profit Institute for Journalism and Social Change. She was
previously Head of Global Investigations at the independent media
outlet openDemocracy, a fellow at the Centre for Investigative
Journalism (CIJ) in London, and a data journalist at the Guardian.
This is her first book.
Matt Kennard is co-founder, and chief investigator, at
Declassified UK, a news outlet investigating British foreign
policy. He was a fellow and then director at the Centre for
Investigative Journalism (CIJ) in London, UK. He has worked as a
staff writer for the Financial Times in Washington, DC, New York,
and London. He is the author of two acclaimed books: Irregular Army
(2012) and The Racket (2015).
This wide-ranging inquiry—based on intensive on-the-ground
investigation—unearths ‘a parallel world, outside of scrutiny…with
very real consequences’. An ugly world, out of control,
unaccountable, but with overwhelming power. It ranges from
investor-state legal systems to intricate systems of corporate
welfare that aid elites and investors. Always concealed in
elaborate devices of seeming to do good. Silent Coup is a highly
revealing exposé of the hidden real world.
*Noam Chomsky*
SIlent Coup opens a window onto multiple battlefields on which
brave communities resist irresistible conglomerates world-wide.
Because these momentous clashes remain under the radar of global
public opinion, reading this book constitutes, in itself, an act of
precious resistance.
*Yanis Varoufakis*
Silent Coup is a crime story: a gripping description of the murky
legal, and regulatory structures and policy changes that privilege
big corporations. It’s a tragedy, outlining the terrible
consequences for people and nature, for democracy and
accountability. It’s a lesson in economics, providing fascinating
and important insights into the functioning of global capitalism
today. But finally it’s also a story of hope, about apparently
powerless people resisting these trends in the struggle for better
and more just futures. Don’t miss this.
*Jayati Ghosh*
Silent Coup shows us how corporations have insulated themselves
from democratic decision-making and stolen our collective power.
Through impressive and important investigative journalism, the
authors reveal how, why and where corporate power has hijacked
democracy. We have to understand this world-spanning corporate
power to build a global movement so powerful that we can take back
our democracies and secure our collective future.
*Jeremy Corbyn*
Silent Coup is a ground-breaking piece of work. Through personal
journeys and encounters, it reveals the truth about how little our
votes mean when corporations and dirty dealers are pulling their
corrupt strings in the background. This book needs to be read
aloud. Silent Coup shows us where we’re heading to if we do
nothing. This book is not about theories, it’s about reality. It’s
what real investigative journalism should be about, but it’s
written in a no nonsense, engaging, and accessible style. This is
stuff we really need to know.
*Benjamin Zephaniah*
Silent Coup is investigative journalism at its best. It shows us
how corporations rule the world: suing sovereign, democratic
governments in invisible courts to erode constitutions and the
democratic rights they enshrine—and writing laws and treaties to
privatise the earth’s resources and public goods. Sovereign
communities and countries are being displaced by sovereign
companies and the supranational systems they have built to
establish their control, creating in the process our age of
corporate colonialism. The book is vital reading for all who care
for human freedom, human rights and democracy.
*Vandana Shiva*
Silent Coup is an outstanding work of secrets revealed: all the
more so for its classic eyewitness reporting. It shows that
democracy's true enemy is within, a dark alliance of rapacious
capital and corrupt law. We have been warned.
*John Pilger*
This brilliant book presents an entirely innovative framework to
understand why the world looks like it does and not what it is. It
explains why the media is largely ignoring the most important story
of our generation. It explains how civic society around the world
is being systematically dismantled by greedy corporations,
governments, judicial bodies, and international institutions. It
crackles by exposing hypocrisy at every level of officialdom. It
demonstrates that voting in Western democracies is only the window
dressing that hides power that few see with the naked eye but that
this book reveals in startling and grotesque detail. If you read
only one book this year, this should be it.
*Steven Donziger*
Quite an eye-opening look at the various abuses of corporate power
across the globe and how they have caused quite a bit of harm and
perhaps unintended consequences . . . absolutely worthy of reading
and could enhance the overall discussion of related topics.
Recommended.
*BookAnon.com*
Silent Coup is investigative journalism at its best, charting the
rise of corporate power after World War II, where the freedoms
fought for were redefined.
*The Morning Star*
This book is detailed, but highly readable. It’s written for a
broad audience with clear explanations and a very visual style. We
go with the authors as they travel to different locations,
investigate local issues, meet community activists and policy
insiders, and delve into archives and history.
*Foreign Control Watchdog*
Excellent and massively important.
*The Canary*
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