Suiting Themselves: How Corporations Drive the Global Agenda
ISBN: 9781849772686
Platform/Publisher: Taylor & Francis / Routledge
Digital rights: Users: Unlimited; Printing: Unlimited; Download: Unlimited



In this brilliantly researched expos 'communications Rottweiler' Sharon Beder blasts open the backrooms and boardrooms to reveal how the international corporate elite dictate global politics for their own benefit. Beder shows how they created business associations andthink tanks in the 1970s to drive public policy, forced the worldwide privatization and deregulation of public services in the 1980s and 1990s (enabling a massive transfer of ownership and control over essential services) and, still not satisfied, have worked relentlessly since the late 1990s to rewrite the very rules of the global economy to funnel wealth and power into their pockets.Want a globalized and homogenized world of conflict, poverty and massive environmental degradation run by a corporate oligarchy that wipes its feet on democracy? Or a democratic world, where poverty is history, companies work for people and clean water is a right, not a privilege you pay for? Beder's message is clear - it's your world, and it's time to fight for it.
While working as a professional engineer, Sharon Beder became interested in the social and political aspects of engineering and returned to school to pursue a doctorate in that field at the University of New South Wales, Australia. Using the development of Sydney's sewer system as a case study, her doctoral research focused on engineering decision-making. She completed her Ph.D. in 1989 and published her research in the book Toxic Fish and Sewer Surfing: How Deceit and Collusion Are Destroying Our Great Beaches.

Beder's work deals mainly with environmental issues, but within that broad field her interests are varied, including environmental politics, the dynamics of environmental/technological controversies, social responsibility, the social aspects of engineering, and trends in both environmentalism and corporate activism. Her book Global Spin: The Corporate Assault on Environmentalism examines the expensive public relations and media campaigns waged by corporations in an effort to prevent the implementation of stricter environmental regulation in Australia, England, the United States, and Canada.

Other titles include The New Engineer Management and Professional Responsibility in a Changing World; The Nature of Sustainable Development; and The Hole Theory: Recent Ozone Depletion Research in the Areas of Medical, Biological and Veterinary Science, Physics, Pharmacy, and Physiology.

Beder has contributed to several books and published numerous articles and papers. She received the Michael Daley award for excellence in science, technology and engineering journalism for an article that appeared in New Scientist.

Several of Beder's books have been used as texts for college courses, and she has developed numerous other educational materials as well, particularly while serving as the Environmental Education Coordinator for the University at Sydney. In 1992, she joined the Science and Technology Studies department at Australia's University of Wollongong, where she is an associate professor.

(Bowker Author Biography)

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