ABSTRACT

Why are crimes of the suite punished more leniently than crimes of the street? When police killings of citizens go unpunished, political torture is sanctioned by the state, and the financial frauds of Wall Street traders remain unprosecuted, nothing succeeds with such regularity as the active failures of national states to obstruct the crimes of the powerful.

Written from the perspective of global sustainability and as an unflinching and unforgiving exposé of the full range of the crimes of the powerful, Unchecked Corporate Power reveals how legalized authorities and political institutions charged with the duty of protecting citizens from law-breaking and injurious activities have increasingly become enablers and colluders with the very enterprises they are obliged to regulate. Here, Gregg Barak explains why the United States and other countries are duplicitous in their harsh reactions to street crimes in comparison to the significantly more harmful and far-reaching crimes of the powerful, and why the crimes of the powerful are treated as beyond incrimination.

What happens to nations that surrender ever-growing economic and political power to the globally super rich and the mammoth multinational corporations they control? And what can people from around the world do to resist the criminality and victimization perpetrated by multinationals, and generated by the prevailing global political economy? Barak examines an array of multinational crimes—corporate, environmental, financial, and state—and their state-legal responses, and outlines policies and strategies for revolutionizing these contradictory relations of capital reproduction, criminality, and unsustainability.

part I|65 pages

Routinizing the crimes of the powerful

chapter |13 pages

Introduction

On the state routinization of unchecked corporate power

chapter 1|27 pages

Capitalism, corporations, and criminality

part II|74 pages

Violating the commons

chapter 3|21 pages

Financial crimes

Violations of trusted securities

chapter 4|31 pages

Environmental crimes

Violations of health and safety

chapter 5|21 pages

Colluding crimes of states and corporations

Violations of the community

part III|32 pages

Halting corporate harm

chapter |15 pages

Conclusion

Democratic capitalism, state-owned multinationals, and sustainable pragmatism