For-Profit Democracy
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Why the Government Is Losing the Trust of Rural America
Loka Ashwood
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Format: Hardcover
Price: $25.00
Price: $25.00
A fascinating sociological assessment of the damaging effects of the for-profit partnership between government and corporation on rural Americans
Why is government distrust rampant, especially in the rural United States? This book offers a simple explanation: corporations and the government together dispossess rural people of their prosperity, and even their property. Based on four years of fieldwork, this eye-opening assessment by sociologist Loka Ashwood plays out in a mixed-race Georgia community that hosted the first nuclear power reactors sanctioned by the government in three decades. This work serves as an explanatory mirror of prominent trends in current American politics. Churches become havens for redemption, poaching a means of retribution, guns a tool of self-defense, and nuclear power a faltering solution to global warming as governance strays from democratic principles. In the absence of hope or trust in rulers, rural racial tensions fester and divide. The book tells of the rebellion that unfolds as the rights of corporations supersede the rights of humans.
Why is government distrust rampant, especially in the rural United States? This book offers a simple explanation: corporations and the government together dispossess rural people of their prosperity, and even their property. Based on four years of fieldwork, this eye-opening assessment by sociologist Loka Ashwood plays out in a mixed-race Georgia community that hosted the first nuclear power reactors sanctioned by the government in three decades. This work serves as an explanatory mirror of prominent trends in current American politics. Churches become havens for redemption, poaching a means of retribution, guns a tool of self-defense, and nuclear power a faltering solution to global warming as governance strays from democratic principles. In the absence of hope or trust in rulers, rural racial tensions fester and divide. The book tells of the rebellion that unfolds as the rights of corporations supersede the rights of humans.
Loka Ashwood is assistant professor in the department of agricultural economics and rural sociology at Auburn University. She is a former award-winning journalist whose work has been published in books and sociological journals.
"A brilliant study of how for-profit democracy shapes power and politics in rural America. Beautifully written and full of insights on how corporate-state power dispossesses, and how and why the dispossessed react as they do."—John Gaventa, author of Power and Powerlessness: Quiescence and Rebellion in an Appalachian Valley
“Loka Ashwood turns the conventional story of American reverence for private property on its head by revealing ways in which property rights are undermined when they conflict with the interests of the 'corporate-state,' an increasingly present and powerful player in the neoliberal era.”—Lisa R. Pruitt, University of California, Davis
"Loka Ashwood delivers a lyrical narrative detailing the inspiring struggles of rural Americans against an unforgiving state and market system. This is a work of great depth and value for us all."—David N. Pellow, author of What is Critical Environmental Justice?
“An accessible exploration of how government affects and is perceived by rural Americans.”—Publishers Weekly, starred review
Winner of the 2020 Fred Buttell Outstanding Scholarly Achievement Award, sponsored by the Rural Sociology Society
ISBN: 9780300215359
Publication Date: June 26, 2018
Publication Date: June 26, 2018
328 pages, 5 1/2 x 8 1/4
25 b/w illus.
25 b/w illus.