Description

Book Synopsis
Plunder examines the dark side of the Rule of Law and explores how it has been used as a powerful political weapon by Western countries in order to legitimize plunder the practice of violent extraction by stronger political actors victimizing weaker ones.
  • Challenges traditionally held beliefs in the sanctity of the Rule of Law by exposing its dark side
  • Examines the Rule of Law''s relationship with ''plunder'' the practice of violent extraction by stronger political actors victimizing weaker ones in the service of Western cultural and economic domination
  • Provides global examples of plunder: of oil in Iraq; of ideas in the form of Western patents and intellectual property rights imposed on weaker peoples; and of liberty in the United States
  • Dares to ask the paradoxical question is the Rule of Law itself illegal?


Trade Review
"Plunder is a detailed, well written autopsy of how law and our legal system further strengthens the already powerful, while decimating those already located outside the reach of power. In the world of the post-economic collapse, Plunder is a painfully frightening roadmap decrying the dangers of the exact "legal" practices (derivatives, call options, etc.) that brought on the current economic crisis." (Multinational Monitor, Jan - Feb 2009)

“Without doubt this is an important book … Mattei and Nader have produced a courageous, intellectually refined, and superbly critical book about one of the main instruments of society-building in our culture. The book should find a wide audience in law classes, and in graduate courses of sociology, anthropology, and political sciences.” (Journal of the Royal Anthropological Society, December 2008)

“A profound work that will find its way into many disciplines. The book is less about plunder than about the ethics and values implicated in the clash between social justice and competitive economics. Mattei and Nader conclude with a call for strategies to increase historical awareness. This book is one of those strategies, and the more worth reading for it. Recommended.” (Choice Reviews, December 2008)

"Without doubt this is an important book … Mattei and Nader have produced a courageous, intellectually refined, and superbly critical book about one of the main instruments of society-building in our culture. The book should find a wide audience in law classes, and in graduate courses of sociology, anthropology, and political sciences." (Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute)









Table of Contents
Preface.

Introduction.

1. Plunder and The Rule of Law.

An Anatomy of Plunder.

Plunder, Hegemony, and Positional Superiority.

Law, Plunder, and European Expansionism.

Institutionalizing Plunder: The Colonial Relationship and the Imperial Project.

A Story of Continuity: Constructing the Empire of Law (lessness).

2. Neo-liberalism: Economic Engine of Plunder.

The Argentinean Bonanza.

Neo-Liberalism: An Economic Theory of Simplification and a Spectacular Project.

Structural Adjustment Programs and the Comprehensive Development Framework.

Development Frameworks, Plunder, and the Rule of Law.

3. Before Neo-Liberalism: a Story of Western Plunder.

The European Roots of Colonial Plunder.

The Fundamental Structure of US Law as a Post-Colonial Reception.

A Theory of Lack, Yesterday and Today.

Before Neo-Liberalism: Colonial Practices and Harmonious Strategies—Yesterday and Now.

4. Plunder of Ideas and the Providers of Legitimacy.

Hegemony and legal Consciousness.

Intellectual Property as Plunder of Ideas.

Providing Legitimacy: Law and Economics.

Providing Legitimacy: Lawyers and Anthropologists.

5. Constructing the Conditions for Plunder.

Plunder of Oil: Iraq and Elsewhere.

The New World Order of Plunder.

Not Only Iraq: Plunder, War, and Legal Ideologies of Intervention.

Institutional Lacks as Conditions for Plunder: Real or Created?.

Double Standards Policy and Plunder.

Poverty: Justification for Intervention and Consequence of Plunder.

6. International Imperial Law.

Reactive Institutions of Imperial Plunder.

U.S. Rule of Law: Forms of Global Domination.

The Globalization of the American Way.

An Ideological Institution of Global Governance: International Law.

Holocaust Litigation: Back to the Future.

The Swallowing of International Law by U.S. law.

Economic Power and the U.S. Courts as Imperial Agencies.

7. Hegemony and Plunder. The Demise of the Rule of Law in the United States.

Strategies to Subordinate the Rule of Law to Plunder.

Plunder in High Places: Enron and its Aftermath.

Plunder in Even Higher Places: Electoral Politics and Plunder.

Plunder of Liberty: The War on Terror.

Plunder Undisrupted: The Discourse of Patriotism.

8. Beyond an Illegal Rule of Law?.

Summing Up: Plunder and The Global Transformation of the Law.

Imperial Rule of Law or the People's Rule of Law.

The Future of Plunder.

Notes to Text.

Selected Further Reading.

Documentary Film Resources.

Index

Plunder

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    A Hardback by Ugo Mattei, Laura Nader

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      Publisher: John Wiley and Sons Ltd
      Publication Date: 14/03/2008
      ISBN13: 9781405178952, 978-1405178952
      ISBN10: 1405178957
      Also in:
      Systems of law

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Plunder examines the dark side of the Rule of Law and explores how it has been used as a powerful political weapon by Western countries in order to legitimize plunder the practice of violent extraction by stronger political actors victimizing weaker ones.
      • Challenges traditionally held beliefs in the sanctity of the Rule of Law by exposing its dark side
      • Examines the Rule of Law''s relationship with ''plunder'' the practice of violent extraction by stronger political actors victimizing weaker ones in the service of Western cultural and economic domination
      • Provides global examples of plunder: of oil in Iraq; of ideas in the form of Western patents and intellectual property rights imposed on weaker peoples; and of liberty in the United States
      • Dares to ask the paradoxical question is the Rule of Law itself illegal?


      Trade Review
      "Plunder is a detailed, well written autopsy of how law and our legal system further strengthens the already powerful, while decimating those already located outside the reach of power. In the world of the post-economic collapse, Plunder is a painfully frightening roadmap decrying the dangers of the exact "legal" practices (derivatives, call options, etc.) that brought on the current economic crisis." (Multinational Monitor, Jan - Feb 2009)

      “Without doubt this is an important book … Mattei and Nader have produced a courageous, intellectually refined, and superbly critical book about one of the main instruments of society-building in our culture. The book should find a wide audience in law classes, and in graduate courses of sociology, anthropology, and political sciences.” (Journal of the Royal Anthropological Society, December 2008)

      “A profound work that will find its way into many disciplines. The book is less about plunder than about the ethics and values implicated in the clash between social justice and competitive economics. Mattei and Nader conclude with a call for strategies to increase historical awareness. This book is one of those strategies, and the more worth reading for it. Recommended.” (Choice Reviews, December 2008)

      "Without doubt this is an important book … Mattei and Nader have produced a courageous, intellectually refined, and superbly critical book about one of the main instruments of society-building in our culture. The book should find a wide audience in law classes, and in graduate courses of sociology, anthropology, and political sciences." (Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute)









      Table of Contents
      Preface.

      Introduction.

      1. Plunder and The Rule of Law.

      An Anatomy of Plunder.

      Plunder, Hegemony, and Positional Superiority.

      Law, Plunder, and European Expansionism.

      Institutionalizing Plunder: The Colonial Relationship and the Imperial Project.

      A Story of Continuity: Constructing the Empire of Law (lessness).

      2. Neo-liberalism: Economic Engine of Plunder.

      The Argentinean Bonanza.

      Neo-Liberalism: An Economic Theory of Simplification and a Spectacular Project.

      Structural Adjustment Programs and the Comprehensive Development Framework.

      Development Frameworks, Plunder, and the Rule of Law.

      3. Before Neo-Liberalism: a Story of Western Plunder.

      The European Roots of Colonial Plunder.

      The Fundamental Structure of US Law as a Post-Colonial Reception.

      A Theory of Lack, Yesterday and Today.

      Before Neo-Liberalism: Colonial Practices and Harmonious Strategies—Yesterday and Now.

      4. Plunder of Ideas and the Providers of Legitimacy.

      Hegemony and legal Consciousness.

      Intellectual Property as Plunder of Ideas.

      Providing Legitimacy: Law and Economics.

      Providing Legitimacy: Lawyers and Anthropologists.

      5. Constructing the Conditions for Plunder.

      Plunder of Oil: Iraq and Elsewhere.

      The New World Order of Plunder.

      Not Only Iraq: Plunder, War, and Legal Ideologies of Intervention.

      Institutional Lacks as Conditions for Plunder: Real or Created?.

      Double Standards Policy and Plunder.

      Poverty: Justification for Intervention and Consequence of Plunder.

      6. International Imperial Law.

      Reactive Institutions of Imperial Plunder.

      U.S. Rule of Law: Forms of Global Domination.

      The Globalization of the American Way.

      An Ideological Institution of Global Governance: International Law.

      Holocaust Litigation: Back to the Future.

      The Swallowing of International Law by U.S. law.

      Economic Power and the U.S. Courts as Imperial Agencies.

      7. Hegemony and Plunder. The Demise of the Rule of Law in the United States.

      Strategies to Subordinate the Rule of Law to Plunder.

      Plunder in High Places: Enron and its Aftermath.

      Plunder in Even Higher Places: Electoral Politics and Plunder.

      Plunder of Liberty: The War on Terror.

      Plunder Undisrupted: The Discourse of Patriotism.

      8. Beyond an Illegal Rule of Law?.

      Summing Up: Plunder and The Global Transformation of the Law.

      Imperial Rule of Law or the People's Rule of Law.

      The Future of Plunder.

      Notes to Text.

      Selected Further Reading.

      Documentary Film Resources.

      Index

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