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In "Corporate Sovereignty," Barkan argues that corporate power
should be rethought as a mode of political sovereignty. Rather than
treating the economic power of corporations as a threat to the
political sovereignty of states, Barkan shows that the two are
ontologically linked. Situating analysis of U.S., British, and
international corporate law alongside careful readings in political
and social theory, he demonstrates that the Anglo-American
corporation and modern political sovereignty are founded in and
bound together through a principle of legally sanctioned immunity
from law. The problems that corporate-led globalization present for
governments result not from regulatory failures as much as from
corporate immunity that is being exported across the globe. For Barkan, there is a paradox in that corporations, which are legal creations, are given such power that they undermine the sovereignty of states. He notes that while the relationship between states and corporations may appear adversarial, it is in fact a kind of "doubling" in which state sovereignty and corporate power are both conjoined and in conflict. Our refusal to grapple with the peculiar nature of this doubling means that some of our best efforts to control corporations unwittingly reinvest the sovereign powers they oppose.
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