معرفی کتاب «Greed, Inc. : Why Corporations Rule the World and How We Let It Happen» نوشتهٔ Wade Rowland، منتشرشده توسط نشر Skyhorse Publishing Company در سال 2011. این کتاب در فرمت epub، زبان انگلیسی ارائه شده است.
**A searing indictment of modern corporations, which enjoy the legal status of individuals but are not bound by the same legal and moral responsibilities.**Why is it that multinational drug companies hide or falsify unfavorable results? Why do automakers knowingly sell us unsafe cars? Why is big business allowed to poison our environment—and us? Why is our food so unhealthy, with obesity growing at such an alarming rate? Why are we working such long hours and enjoying life less? This timely and important book places the blame for much of what ails contemporary society squarely on one institution: the modern publicly traded corporation, which enjoys the legal status of an individual but does not seem bound by the same legal and moral responsibilities, or, in fact, by its nature that is brutally and implacably selfish.While recognizing the positive contributions corporations have made over the past two centuries to science, technology, and medicine, Rowland examines the greed at the core of it all and pinpoints what went wrong and how we can free ourselves from the "Greed is good" syndrome.**"A stimulating and satisfyingly outrageous collection of corporate misdeeds." —__Los Angeles Times__** A searing indictment of modern corporations, which enjoy the legal status of individuals but are not bound by the same legal and moral responsibilities. Why is it that multinational drug companies hide or falsify unfavorable results? Why do automakers knowingly sell us unsafe cars? Why is big business allowed to poison our environment—and us? Why is our food so unhealthy, with obesity growing at such an alarming rate? Why are we working such long hours and enjoying life less? This timely and important book places the blame for much of what ails contemporary society squarely on one institution: the modern publicly traded corporation, which enjoys the legal status of an individual but does not seem bound by the same legal and moral responsibilities, or, in fact, by its nature that is brutally and implacably selfish. While recognizing the positive contributions corporations have made over the past two centuries to science, technology, and medicine, Rowland examines the greed at the core of it all and pinpoints what went wrong and how we can free ourselves from the "Greed is good" syndrome. "A stimulating and satisfyingly outrageous collection of corporate misdeeds." — Los Angeles Times
Why is it that multinational drug companies hide or falsify unfavorable results? Why do automakers knowingly sell us unsafe cars? Why is big business allowed to poison our environment—and us? Why is our food so unhealthy, with obesity growing at such an alarming rate? Why are we working such long hours and enjoying life less? This timely and important book places the blame for much of what ails contemporary society squarely on one institution: the modern publicly traded corporation, which enjoys the legal status of an individual but does not seem bound by the same legal and moral responsibilities, or, in fact, by its nature that is brutally and implacably selfish.
While recognizing the positive contributions corporations have made over the past two centuries to science, technology, and medicine, Rowland examines the greed at the core of it all and pinpoints what went wrong and how we can free ourselves from the “Greed is good” syndrome.
Charges that today's corporations enjoy the legal status of individuals but are not bound by the same legal and moral responsibilities, and traces the contributions and unethical activities of such companies as Enron and Exxon Greed, Inc. is a seething indictment of modern corporations that enjoy the legal status of individuals but are not bound by the same legal and moral responsibilities Wade Rowland's searing indictment of modern corporations that enjoy the legal status of individuals but are not bound by the same legal and moral responsibilities