Foreword by Richard Westra
Introduction
1. The Corporation: From the “Original Sin” (Santa Clara) to Right
of Personhood (Roe)
Introduction
The Corporation: Natural versus Juridical Personhood
Fetal Personhood and the Law Before and After Roe
Some Further Arguments Regarding the Right to Life of the Preborn
in Common Law
Arguments about the Possible Introduction of “Human Life
Amendments” into Law
Personhood and its Problems
Personhood as “Categorization” not “Recognition”: the Source of
Corporate Power
2. The Corporation: Controlling Public Health and Other Basic
Rights
Individuals and the Corporation
Corporate Activities and their “Toxic Trespass”
Pulp and Paper Mills and Mercury Poisoning: The Canadian Case of
Grassy Narrows and White Dog
Central and South American Cases: Attacks on Health Through Mining
and Extractive Industries
A Brief Overview of the Constitutional Protection Available for the
Environment in Colombia and Ecuador
Corporate Agribusiness and Health
Corporate Crime as Human/Animal Oppression
From Big Tobacco to the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control
The Corporation and Its Internal Stakeholders
Concluding Thoughts
3. The Corporation and the State: A Question of Power
Introduction
“Corporate Clout” in a Lawless World
Existing International Laws for State and Corporate
Responsibility
The Corporation as a “Quasi-State”
The State and the Corporation: Responsibility and Complicity
Jus Cogens and the Effects of Corporate Activities
The Impunity of Corporate Criminals and the State
Corporate Impunity and “Imperial Plunder”
National Lawyers Guild International Committee
Corporate/State Crime and Third States Obligations
Corporate Power and Cosmopolitan Democracy
Corporations, the State and the “Two Constitutions”
4. The Corporation as Criminal
Introduction: External Stakeholders
Norms to Restrain Corporate Harms: “Gaps” or Structural
Violence?
Corporate Forward March: From Weedkillers and “Super Insects”
Pesticides Beyond Agriculture: Corporate Power and Chemical
Warfare
Colonization, Genocide and War Crimes: Germany and the Herero
People
Complicity and Responsibility from Nuremberg to Vietnam
Corporation as Criminal: Internal Stakeholders
Corporation as Criminal: Asbestos Imposes Direct and Indirect
Harm
Concluding Thoughts
5. The Corporation as a Supranational Power: The European Union
Introduction
Europe’s Revolt and Resistance to Corporate Power: Theory and the
Law
Revolt and Resistance to Corporate Power in Practice
Criminal Precedents and Corporate Disaster in Hungary
Bayer’s Criminal Precedents: Unacknowledged Dangers
Corporate Power and the “European Dream” in Conflict
The Roots of “Europe, Inc.” in the American Dream
Corporate Responsibility under ATCA
Corporate Criminality, Fitness to Rule and “Tempering
Globalization”
Corporations are Unfit to Hold Their Present Ruling Position
6. The Corporation as a Supranational Power
Introduction
Climate Change and Corporate Culpability
Climate Change and State Corporate Relations
“Nature’s Trust” Against the Power of Drones and Caterpillars
Corporate Complicity in Attacks Against the Right to Life
Legal Versus Natural Persons
The New Supranationalism and Corporate Attacks on Civil and
Political Rights: The EU and the US on Conflicting Trajectories
Europe’s Protection of Human Rights Against Multinationals
The United States and the Reach and Limits of Supranational
Power
Supranational Corporate Power and Post-National Citizenship
From Local to Global Citizenship Against Corporate Power: The
Occupy Movement
Concluding Thoughts
Appendix I: List of Cases
Appendix II: List of Documents
References
Index
Title will be prominently featured at all of the academic
conferences we attend
Promotion to coincide with the annual Historical Materialism
conference, which has a growing academic audience (400 graduate
students and professors in 2010)
Reviews will be sought from left leaning academic journals
Laura Westra, Ph.D. (1982) in Philosophy, University of Toronto, and Ph.D. (2005) in Law, Osgoode Hall Law School, currently teaches environmental law at the University of Windsor, international law at the University of Milano (Bicocca). She has published twenty-eight monographs and collections on environmental justice and human rights issues and international law, and over 85 articles and chapters.
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