Cambridge University Press Series on Business and Pubic Policy
is pleased to announce the publication of:


PUBLIC FORCES AND PRIVATE POLITICS IN AMERICAN BIG BUSINESS

by

Professor Timothy Werner
McCombs School of Business
University of Texas, Austin

Book Description:

What are the political motivations behind firms' decisions to adopt policies that self-regulate their behavior in a manner that is beyond compliance with state, federal and local law? Public Forces and Private Politics in American Big Business advances a new understanding of the firm as a political actor that expands beyond the limited conceptualizations offered by economists and organization theorists. Timothy Werner develops a general theory of private politics that is tested using three case studies: the environment, gay rights and executive compensation. Using the conclusions of these case studies and an analysis of interviews with executives at 'Fortune 500' firms, Werner finds that politics can contribute significantly to our understanding of corporate decision-making on private policies and corporate social responsibility in the United States.


Advance praise:

'How is it that big business in the US has become both more powerful over government and more vulnerable to activist pressure? In addressing this puzzle, Timothy Werner has pulled off a major feat: he has woven together an analysis of 'private politics', public policy agendas, and the theory of the firm that is accessible, nuanced, and wide-ranging in its implications.'

--- Tim Bartley, Indiana University


'Had Winston Churchill been an economist, he might have said, 'Capitalism is the worst form of economic organization, except for all those other forms that have been tried from time to time'. In [this book] Tim Werner goes beyond the 'which?' when it comes to government or market, and directs the reader towards 'how?' … Werner argues that business groups are partly strategic, but business political action is also partly just defense. Interestingly, it turns out that business has today has more leverage over the formal state, but is less powerful in the larger civil society … Werner slays a few sacred cows, on both the left and the right. This is the sort of book America needs if we are going to redirect politics away from partisan bickering and toward solutions.'

--- Michael C. Munger, Director of the Philosophy, Politics, and Economics Program, Duke University


For additional information:
http://www.cambridge.org/si/knowledge/isbn/item6796473/Public%20Forces%20and%20Private%20Politics%20in%20American%20Big%20Business/?site_locale=sl_SI



**********************************************************************

        Aseem Prakash
        General Editor, Cambridge University Press Series on Business and 
Public Policy
        Professor, Department of Political Science
        Walker Family Professor for the College of Arts and Sciences
        39 Gowen Hall, Box 353530
        University of Washington
        Seattle, WA 98195-3530

        [email protected]
        http://faculty.washington.edu/aseem/

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