The Business Corporation as a Political Actor

Events

11 - 12 September 2023

Workshop: Business Corporations, Non-ideal Theory and Social Change

In recent years, the business corporation has received increasing attention in political theory. This is hardly surprising given the persistent social and political problems that corporations are implicated in. The literature so far has largely focused on three issues: What are corporations and what is their place in the political system and political theory (Ciepley 2013, Singer 2018, Claassen 2023)? What, if anything, is wrong with corporations and their actions (Christiano 2010, Anderson 2017)? How could corporations be institutionally improved or replaced by alternative forms of economic organisation (Malleson 2014, Corneo 2017, Ferreras 2017)?

One of the core premises of theorists who tackle these questions is that corporations hold enormous and largely unaccountable power and are currently perpetrators of injustice. Given that premise, many existing theories of the corporation remain undercomplex: they do not sufficiently address how, under conditions of power imbalance, existing wrongs can be righted, and alternative institutional designs implemented. Meanwhile, there has been increasing attention in political theory to the possibilities for and conditions of positive social change (Zheng 2022). For example, parts of the growing realist literature have put a strong emphasis on proper accounts of current constellations of power and interest (Geuss 2008). Others focus on how to determine the agents of change under nonideal circumstances (Laurence 2021) or they concentrate on the establishment of effective counterpower (Bagg 2021).

This workshop aims at bringing together scholars working in these areas of political theory. It invites political theorists of the corporation to consider real possibilities of change under nonideal conditions and reflect on the role of corporations as obstacles or enablers of change; and realist political theorists and theorists of social change to expand the scope of their work, beyond state and citizens, to include business corporations as important political actors. The aim is to contribute to the conversation on the practical and theoretical dimensions of social change, given the power and role of business corporations. We invite contributions from scholars working on the political theory of the business