In this work, outspoken business leader Anita Roddick brings together the voices of some of the most prominent authorities on the phenomenon of Globalization, including Susan George, David Korten and Naomi Klein. Full of images, this book gets right to the heart of the issue, exploding the myths that would have us believe Globalization is a force for good. Covering aspects of the subject as diverse as human rights, the environment, international finance, health, the food we eat and trade, the book combines medium-length articles with quotes, case notes and interviews. This book constitutes a call to action, showing how each and every one of us can take on the corporate.
David C. Korten Ordine dei libri
David C. Korten è un autore che, dopo decenni di lavoro in istituzioni di primo piano, si è allontanato dall'establishment per dedicarsi all'attivismo. Le sue opere, lettura obbligatoria nelle università di tutto il mondo, analizzano criticamente i modelli economici che aggravano la povertà e la distruzione ambientale. Korten si concentra su come sostituire il dominio corporativo con una società più equa e sostenibile. La sua scrittura esplora le cause profonde dei fallimenti sistemici e cerca percorsi verso un futuro umano positivo potenziando la società civile e le economie locali.





- 2001
- 2001
When Corporations Rule the World
- 385pagine
- 14 ore di lettura
When Corporations Rule the World has become a modern classic. Korten's warnings about the growing global power of multinational corporations seem prophetic today. This new edition has been revised throughout to make it more accessible to the general reader, and features a new introduction, a new epilogue, and three new chapters. While Korten points out that the multinationals are, if anything, more powerful now than they were when he first wrote the book, he also offers reason for hope: the growth of the international Living Democracy movement opposing corporate rule. The new material in the book: Documents the consolidation since 1995 of financial and corporate power at the expense of democracy, people, communities, and the planet Looks in depth at the nature and cultural underpinnings of the burgeoning Living Democracy movement to resist corporate power Offers a vision of a what a civil society grounded in life-centered values rather than immediate financial gain might look like.
- 1999
In this book, David Korten makes a compelling and well-documented case that capitalism's claims to being the engine of wealth creation, the champion of democracy, and the embodiment of the market economy are unfounded. Among Korten's conclusions: Capitalism is a pathology that afflicts democracies and market economies in the absence of vigilant public oversight. The consolidation of economic power under a handful of global mega-corporations is a victory for central planning - not the market economy. The alternative to the new global capitalism is a planetary system of democratically governed market economies that honor basic market principles of the sort actually advocated by Adam Smith.
- 1998
Globalizing Civil Society: Reclaiming Our Right to Power
- 80pagine
- 3 ore di lettura
Focusing on the pressing global issues highlighted by the 1998 UN Conference on Human Settlements, the book critiques governments for neglecting critical problems like hunger, housing shortages, and environmental degradation. It delves into the root causes of these crises and presents innovative solutions centered on sustainability, community, and equity, advocating for principles essential to securing a healthier future for humanity.