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A comprehensive analysis of how the large corporation has impacted
national and global governance. Wilks has made an important
contribution to the literature on the changing political and social
role of business in contemporary capitalist polities.' - David
Vogel, University of California, US'Observers are increasingly
realizing that that the large corporation has become one of the
main institutions that govern our lives; the market economy, which
in principle prevents corporations from possessing political power,
today endows them with that power. Stephen Wilks here traces the
extraordinarily important implications of this fact, and makes some
sober proposals for tackling the problems it creates for democracy.
Others have noted this phenomenon; here at last is a thorough study
of it - detailed enough to satisfy the standards of social science;
worrying enough to command the concern of policy makers; and
written in an approachable style to attract the general reader.' -
Colin Crouch, University of Warwick, UK 'This is a book that needed
to be written and Stephen Wilks has the academic understanding and
breadth of practical experience to accomplish the task with
authority and conviction. This is an important book, not only
because it helps to fill a gap in a still under developed
literature on the political role of the modern corporation, but
because it raises important and disturbing questions about
contemporary democracy.' - Wyn Grant, University of Warwick, UK The
large business corporation has become a governing institution in
national and global politics. This trail-blazing book offers a
critical account of its political dominance and lack of democratic
legitimacy. Thanks to successful wealth generation and ideological
victories the large business corporation has become an effective
political actor and has entered into partnership with government in
the design of public policy and delivery of public services.
Stephen Wilks argues that governmental and corporate elites have
transformed British politics to create a 'new corporate state' with
similar patterns in the USA, in competitor economies - including
China - and in global governance. The argument embraces
multinational corporations, corporate social responsibility,
corporate governance and the inequality generated by corporate
dominance. The crucial analysis presented in this ground-breaking
book will prove invaluable for academics, researchers and both
under- and postgraduate students with an interest in the role of
the corporation in politics and society across a wide range of
fields including business and management (business ethics),
politics, political economy, sociology, corporate governance and
strategy. Contents: Preface 1. The Genesis of a Governing
Institution 2. The Corporation as a Political Actor 3.
Globalisation and the Enhanced Power of Multinational Corporations
4. Corporate Power in the UK: The Rise of the Corporate Elite 5.
The Politics of the New Corporate State 6. Partnership and Policy
in Britain s New Corporate State 7. Multinational Corporations as
Partners in Global Governance 8. Corporations, Culture and
Accountability 9. How Persuasive is Corporate Social
Responsibility? 10. The Explosion of Interest in Corporate
Governance 11. Conclusion: Fairy-tales, Facts, Foci and Futures
Bibliography Index
Reform of public sector governance is a well-established global
trend, both in government and business, as countries move from
traditional bureaucracies to management modelled on the private
sector. This book offers a striking and original comparison of
recent developments drawing on two of the leading innovators - the
UK and Australia, and on one of the classic East Asian
administrative systems in Korea. Its novelty lies in the parallel
comparison with reform of the governance of the business
corporation and the 'read across' from change in the private sector
to change in the public sector. Also identified are the ways in
which the reforms taking place have been influenced by
international models. The authors, all leading academics in
Australia, Britain and Korea, base their analyses on original
research. The book's main sections deal with private sector
management, privatisation and public enterprises, corporate
governance, and government-business relations. Conclusions are
drawn regarding possible future policy and changing trajectories of
reform as well as about the content, success and extent of national
reforms in a global setting. Reforming Public and Corporate
Governance will be of interest to political scientists, political
economists and East Asian scholars, as well as academics,
researchers, policymakers and NGOs involved in public policy and
management.
If you were to stand in one spot at an iconic location for 30 hours
and simply observe, never closing your eyes, you still wouldn’t
be able to take in all the detail and emotion found in a Stephen
Wilkes panoramic photograph. Not only does Wilkes shoot over 1,500
exposures from a fixed angle, he also distills this visual
information afterward in his studio, painstakingly composing
selected frames into a single image.Day to Night presents 60 epic
panoramas created between 2009 and 2022, shot everywhere from
Africa’s Serengeti to the Blue Lagoon in Iceland, from the Grand
Canyon to Coney Island, from Trafalgar Square to Times Square. Each
composition is a labor of love as well as patience. Wilkes waited
more than two years to gain permission to photograph Pope Francis
celebrating Easter mass in the Vatican, ultimately producing a
vivid tableau in which the pontiff appears 10 times.The book also
features extraordinary details—works of art in their own right
that highlight the stories contained within each image. A bride
makes her way through Central Park; in Tanzania, zebras gather
around a near-invisible watering hole during a drought; in Rio de
Janeiro, surfers come and go while a man holds a sign reading “No
more than two questions per customer.” “It is exactly these
small stories, these details, that draw people into the
photographs,” says Wilkes. Once discovered, these mini narratives
lend each composition a personal, candid feel.This collection takes
us on a seamless trip from dawn to dark across the world’s most
iconic locations, unveiling the unique ebb and flow of man-made and
natural landmarks like never before.
The international projection of Japan's corporate and technological
power is transforming world manufacturing and the international
political economy. Debate rages about Japan's economic success and
the role of the state in nurturing it. The Japanese background to
these debates is widely misunderstood and are analysed in
research-based chapters by British and Japanese specialists on
government-industry relations. Japanese policies for industrial
promotion, regulation and decline are set in a context of
comparative political economy. Sectors include pharmaceuticals,
shipbuilding and telecommunications in the US and Japan.
A comprehensive analysis of how the large corporation has impacted
national and global governance. Wilks has made an important
contribution to the literature on the changing political and social
role of business in contemporary capitalist polities.' - David
Vogel, University of California, US'Observers are increasingly
realizing that that the large corporation has become one of the
main institutions that govern our lives; the market economy, which
in principle prevents corporations from possessing political power,
today endows them with that power. Stephen Wilks here traces the
extraordinarily important implications of this fact, and makes some
sober proposals for tackling the problems it creates for democracy.
Others have noted this phenomenon; here at last is a thorough study
of it - detailed enough to satisfy the standards of social science;
worrying enough to command the concern of policy makers; and
written in an approachable style to attract the general reader.' -
Colin Crouch, University of Warwick, UK 'This is a book that needed
to be written and Stephen Wilks has the academic understanding and
breadth of practical experience to accomplish the task with
authority and conviction. This is an important book, not only
because it helps to fill a gap in a still under developed
literature on the political role of the modern corporation, but
because it raises important and disturbing questions about
contemporary democracy.' - Wyn Grant, University of Warwick, UK The
large business corporation has become a governing institution in
national and global politics. This trail-blazing book offers a
critical account of its political dominance and lack of democratic
legitimacy. Thanks to successful wealth generation and ideological
victories the large business corporation has become an effective
political actor and has entered into partnership with government in
the design of public policy and delivery of public services.
Stephen Wilks argues that governmental and corporate elites have
transformed British politics to create a 'new corporate state' with
similar patterns in the USA, in competitor economies - including
China - and in global governance. The argument embraces
multinational corporations, corporate social responsibility,
corporate governance and the inequality generated by corporate
dominance. The crucial analysis presented in this ground-breaking
book will prove invaluable for academics, researchers and both
under- and postgraduate students with an interest in the role of
the corporation in politics and society across a wide range of
fields including business and management (business ethics),
politics, political economy, sociology, corporate governance and
strategy. Contents: Preface 1. The Genesis of a Governing
Institution 2. The Corporation as a Political Actor 3.
Globalisation and the Enhanced Power of Multinational Corporations
4. Corporate Power in the UK: The Rise of the Corporate Elite 5.
The Politics of the New Corporate State 6. Partnership and Policy
in Britain s New Corporate State 7. Multinational Corporations as
Partners in Global Governance 8. Corporations, Culture and
Accountability 9. How Persuasive is Corporate Social
Responsibility? 10. The Explosion of Interest in Corporate
Governance 11. Conclusion: Fairy-tales, Facts, Foci and Futures
Bibliography Index
This collection provides the first authoritative comparison of
competition policy in the main capitalist economies. It takes a
public policy approach which cuts through the traditional arenas of
lawyers and economists to deal with the role of institutions,
policy processes, and political priorities. This book provides
definitive (and in some cases unique) studies of the six 'model'
regimes of the USA, Germany, Japan, the United Kingdom, and the
European Union. Each chapter is written by eminent country
specialists, is based on original research, and is up to date. The
comparative dimension is presented in explicit introductory and
concluding chapters but the comparison is also set in the context
of the globalization of economic activity and the
internationalization of policy. The book therefore caters to the
distinctive economic policy predicament of the 1990s - the
breakdown of national models in the face of globalizing pressures.
This study promises to become a standard work which will appeal to
students of political science and public policy but will also be of
intense interest to lawyers and practitioners. Further, since an
understanding of competition policy is essential to an
understanding of international competitiveness, students of
economics, business studies, and political economy will find this a
valuable and suggestive study.
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