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PAPERS

Law and the Political Geography of US Corporate Regulation

Pages 1-20 | Received 01 Jan 2010, Accepted 01 Sep 2010, Published online: 05 Apr 2011
 

Abstract

The recent financial crisis has brought new attention to the politics of economic behaviour in the United States. This article uses a critical legal geographical examination of corporate regulation in the US to guide emerging interest past the narrow focus on the past 10 years to a more substantive engagement with US corporate regulatory history. The argument advanced is that the open, critical and creative public discussion needed to define and enforce the desired role for corporations in contemporary society requires that critical attention be paid to conceptions of the corporation and of corporate rights and the political geography of corporate regulation that have generally gone unexamined.

Notes

Thanks to Mark Purcell for this reminder.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Mark Pendras

The author would like to thank Mark Purcell and two anonymous reviewers for their contributions to this article, which has benefited significantly from their input. Errors and omissions are the fault of the author alone.

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