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DTSTART:20260514T120000
LOCATION: Postgraduate Research Hub, 2nd Floor Solomon Mahlangu House
DESCRIPTION:When Companies Rule: Corporate Power from the East India Company to Silicon Valley (book talk – book forthcoming, Columbia University Press, 2026).When Companies Rule: Corporate Power from the East India Company to Silicon Valley (book talk &ndash; book forthcoming, Columbia University Press, 2026) Dr Maha Rafi Atal, University of Glasgow The political power of corporations today is often theorized as a product of state weakness. Neoliberalism has rolled back regulatory capacity, while globalization has unleashed corporations into a transnational realm where no one state has jurisdiction. Corporations govern, so the story runs, in the gaps these changes create, shaping society to serve profit-seeking interests. This story, however, is a flawed one in two respects. First, corporate political power today is as much an ideological as a functional project, shaped by the moral vision that corporate actors have of an ideal society, a vision that is both richer and more idiosyncratic than mere neoliberalism would suggest. Moreover, people subject to corporate political control&mdash;whether in industrial enclaves or on the futuristic campuses of digital platforms&mdash;respond to it in ideological as well as material terms. Second, the &ldquo;governance gap&rdquo; account of corporate power overstates the novelty of contemporary private governance, and underplays the historical continuity of corporations&rsquo; status as public and political actors who long predate the modern state. As a result, efforts to curtail corporate power focus on reasserting the public regulatory authority of individual nation-states and restoring corporations to a private, economic realm. In fact, this lecture will argue, a more normative and historicized account of corporate power points to prospects for holding it accountable as a public authority at a transnational level.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<strong>When Companies Rule: Corporate Power from the East India Company to Silicon Valley (book talk – book forthcoming, Columbia University Press, 2026).</strong><p>When Companies Rule: Corporate Power from the East India Company to Silicon Valley (book talk &ndash; book forthcoming, Columbia University Press, 2026) Dr Maha Rafi Atal, University of Glasgow The political power of corporations today is often theorized as a product of state weakness. Neoliberalism has rolled back regulatory capacity, while globalization has unleashed corporations into a transnational realm where no one state has jurisdiction. Corporations govern, so the story runs, in the gaps these changes create, shaping society to serve profit-seeking interests. This story, however, is a flawed one in two respects. First, corporate political power today is as much an ideological as a functional project, shaped by the moral vision that corporate actors have of an ideal society, a vision that is both richer and more idiosyncratic than mere neoliberalism would suggest. Moreover, people subject to corporate political control&mdash;whether in industrial enclaves or on the futuristic campuses of digital platforms&mdash;respond to it in ideological as well as material terms. Second, the &ldquo;governance gap&rdquo; account of corporate power overstates the novelty of contemporary private governance, and underplays the historical continuity of corporations&rsquo; status as public and political actors who long predate the modern state. As a result, efforts to curtail corporate power focus on reasserting the public regulatory authority of individual nation-states and restoring corporations to a private, economic realm. In fact, this lecture will argue, a more normative and historicized account of corporate power points to prospects for holding it accountable as a public authority at a transnational level.</p>
SUMMARY:Book talk: When Companies Rule: Corporate Power from the East India Company to Silicon Valley 
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