From its roots in seventeenth-century Britain to its modern incarnation in Enron and WorldCom, the modern corporation
- restless, autonomous, and self-perpetuating - has gained potency. Designed to seek profit and power, the corporation
has pursued both objectives with endless tenacity, steadily bending the framework of the law and incurring destruction
in its path. Where did the corporation come from? How did it get so much power? What is its ultimate trajectory?
Considering the importance of such questions, it is surprisingly difficult to find answers.
Using cutting-edge research from academic historians, sociologists, political scientists, and legal scholars, Gangs
of America attempts to answer these questions in a unique, riveting narrative. The book recounts the settlement
of America by corporations, details the surprising impetus for the Revolutionary War, then traces the expansion
of corporate rights onto the global stage - culminating in an assessment of current struggles over such issues
as media control and campaign finance reform. Part of the BK Currents series, the book promotes positive social
change.