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ID121094
Title ProperBeyond public and private
Other Title Informationtoward a political theory of the corporation
LanguageENG
AuthorCiepley, David
Publication2013.
Summary / Abstract (Note)This article challenges the liberal, contractual theory of the corporation and argues for replacing it with a political theory of the corporation. Corporations are government-like in their powers, and government grants them both their external "personhood" and their internal governing authority. They are thus not simply private. Yet they are privately organized and financed and therefore not simply public. Corporations transgress all the basic dichotomies that structure liberal treatments of law, economics, and politics: public/private, government/market, privilege/equality, and status/contract. They are "franchise governments" that cannot be satisfactorily assimilated to liberalism. The liberal effort to assimilate them, treating them as contractually constituted associations of private property owners, endows them with rights they ought not have, exacerbates their irresponsibility, and compromises their principal public benefit of generating long-term growth. Instead, corporations need to be placed in a distinct category-neither public nor private, but "corporate"-to be regulated by distinct rules and norms.
`In' analytical NoteAmerican Political Science Review Vol. 107, No.1; Feb 2013: p.139-158
Journal SourceAmerican Political Science Review Vol. 107, No.1; Feb 2013: p.139-158
Key WordsContratual Theory of the Corporation ;  Political Theory of the Corporation ;  Government ;  Economics ;  Politics ;  Private Property