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Industrial-strength denial : eight stories of corporations defending the indefensible, from the slave trade to climate change / Barbara Freese.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Oakland, California : University of California Press, (c)2020.Description: 1 online resourceContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9780520968851
Subject(s): Genre/Form: LOC classification:
  • HD30 .I538 2020
Online resources: Available additional physical forms:
Contents:
A "more pleasing representation" : the alternate reality crafted by the slave lobby -- "A wonderful stimulant" : radium, risk and responsibility -- "The nut behind the wheel" : carmakers avoiding blame for highway deaths -- "How wrong one can be" : bias, tribalism and leaded gasoline -- "Our free enterprise system is at stake" : CFCs, ideology and manipulated uncertainty -- "Psychological crutches" : tobacco's mass-production of denial -- "Bottom line-nothing else matters" : the financial crisis and a culture of exploitation -- A "deceitful, hysterical, out-of-control rampage" : fossil fuels, climate denial, and distrust-building -- Conclusion : shifting the social norm toward the public interest.
Subject: "This book tells the stories of eight major campaigns of corporate denial-the lies, delusions, and rationalizations that emerge when people working in competitive, profit-driven group enterprises are faced with powerful evidence that they are causing harm. Tobacco is the poster-child of this phenomenon, but denial comes from people selling many other risky products, creating workplace hazards, or releasing dangerous pollutants. In almost every case, the story begins with an exciting discovery-of, for example, a New World, a new element or chemical, a new means of mass production, or a new way of packaging financial risk. An industry races to exploit that discovery and succeeds, sometimes changing society along the way. And in each case this commercial activity causes a grave harm, to other people or the planet. Those outside the industry find evidence of this harm, raise the alarm, and a public debate ensues. Corporate representatives offer a flurry of denials, perpetuating the harm by blocking policies that would reduce it. The specific denials-which are the focus of this book-vary, but the themes echo from campaign to campaign. The stories in this book stand as a reminder of why corporate activity needs to be monitored, challenged, and regulated"--
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Item type Current library Collection Call number URL Status Date due Barcode
Online Book (LOGIN USING YOUR MY CIU LOGIN AND PASSWORD) Online Book (LOGIN USING YOUR MY CIU LOGIN AND PASSWORD) G. Allen Fleece Library ONLINE Non-fiction HD30.255 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Link to resource Available on1114271467

Includes bibliographies and index.

Introduction : a dangerous phenomenon -- A "more pleasing representation" : the alternate reality crafted by the slave lobby -- "A wonderful stimulant" : radium, risk and responsibility -- "The nut behind the wheel" : carmakers avoiding blame for highway deaths -- "How wrong one can be" : bias, tribalism and leaded gasoline -- "Our free enterprise system is at stake" : CFCs, ideology and manipulated uncertainty -- "Psychological crutches" : tobacco's mass-production of denial -- "Bottom line-nothing else matters" : the financial crisis and a culture of exploitation -- A "deceitful, hysterical, out-of-control rampage" : fossil fuels, climate denial, and distrust-building -- Conclusion : shifting the social norm toward the public interest.

"This book tells the stories of eight major campaigns of corporate denial-the lies, delusions, and rationalizations that emerge when people working in competitive, profit-driven group enterprises are faced with powerful evidence that they are causing harm. Tobacco is the poster-child of this phenomenon, but denial comes from people selling many other risky products, creating workplace hazards, or releasing dangerous pollutants. In almost every case, the story begins with an exciting discovery-of, for example, a New World, a new element or chemical, a new means of mass production, or a new way of packaging financial risk. An industry races to exploit that discovery and succeeds, sometimes changing society along the way. And in each case this commercial activity causes a grave harm, to other people or the planet. Those outside the industry find evidence of this harm, raise the alarm, and a public debate ensues. Corporate representatives offer a flurry of denials, perpetuating the harm by blocking policies that would reduce it. The specific denials-which are the focus of this book-vary, but the themes echo from campaign to campaign. The stories in this book stand as a reminder of why corporate activity needs to be monitored, challenged, and regulated"--

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