Skip to main content Skip to search Skip to search

Business & Economics General

In Whose Interests

An Essay on Multinational Corporations

by (author) M. Patricia Marchak

Publisher
McGill-Queen's University Press
Initial publish date
Jun 2011
Category
General
  • eBook

    ISBN
    9780773590922
    Publish Date
    Jun 2011
    List Price
    $40.95

Add it to your shelf

Where to buy it

Description

In In Whose Interests, Patricia Marchak adopts a critical perspective, arguing that multinational corporations do not operate in the interests of society at large or in the interests of a national society such as Canada. Creating and sustaining a set of interests particular to their own well-being and growth, they are efficient organizations for which human labour and management of technical resources are primarily of monetary value. Such resources, along with natural materials, are managed by and for corporations so that technology, labour, and knowledge are harnessed to corporate growth rather than social welfare. Divided into two parts, the first concerned with the political economy of a corporate capitalism with particular reference to the Canadian situation, the second concerned with the internal organization of corporations, and with the contributions of sociology to an understanding of these, In Whose Interest provides a comprehensive entry into the literature of political economy.

About the author

M. Patricia Marchak (1936-2010), former dean of arts, University of British Columbia, is the author of several books including No Easy Fix, Logging the Globe, The Integrated Circus, God's Assassins, and Reigns of Terror.

M. Patricia Marchak's profile page

Editorial Reviews

"[In Whose Interest] is first-rate scholarly effort from which we can all learn. It is a work appropriate to a number of areas in sociology and to related areas in other social science disciplines. Professor Marchak does a masterful job of summarizing the literature for us, providing the novice with a good overview of these issues and the already initiated with new insights and analyses." Paul Stevenson, Contemporary Crises 6

Other titles by