Taming the Octopus

The Long Battle for the Soul of the Corporation

5 April 2024

Territory Rights — Worldwide.

Description

A groundbreaking history of corporate social responsibility shows how efforts to hold big business accountable changed American capitalism

Recent controversies around ESG investing and “woke” capital evoke an old idea: the Progressive-era vision of a socially responsible corporation. By the twentieth century, in fact, the notion that business leaders could benefit society had become a consensus view. But as Kyle Edward Williams’s brilliant history shows, New Deal liberalism realised a kind of big business supervision narrowly focused on the financial interests of shareholders. This inadvertently laid the groundwork for a set of fringe views to become orthodoxy: that market forces should rule every facet of society. Along the way American capitalism itself was reshaped, stripping businesses to their profit-making core. As a rising tide of activists pushed corporations to account for societal harms from napalm to seatbelts to inequitable hiring, a new idea emerged: that managers could maximise value for society while still turning a maximal profit. This elusive ideal, “stakeholder capitalism”, still dominates our headlines today. Williams’s necessary history equips us to reconsider democracy’s tangled relationship with capitalism.

Hardback

9780393867237

160 x 236 mm • 304 pages

£22.99

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Ebook

9780393867244

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£22.99

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