An edition of No contest (1996)

No contest

corporate lawyers and the perversion of justice in America

1st ed.
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Last edited by reshelved
July 20, 2024 | History
An edition of No contest (1996)

No contest

corporate lawyers and the perversion of justice in America

1st ed.
  • 1 Want to read

In No Contest, Ralph Nader and Wesley J. Smith kick over the rotted log our corporate-dominated legal system has become to reveal what has been happening to individual justice just out of public view. Through extensive research and interviews with juries, litigants, judges, lawyers, and legal scholars, Nader and Smith counter the corporate-financed propaganda blitz that has painted multibillion-dollar corporations as hapless victims of ordinary Americans bent on suing their way into prosperity. They argue that, in fact, our system has all but abandoned the ideal of providing every American access to justice. Instead, many courts have become the nearly exclusive domain of the country's largest and most powerful corporations - and their lawyers. Behind the giant corporations' tightening grip on American society are the large corporate law firms who have perfected the art of nullifying, misusing, or breaking the law, while pretending to uphold it. In No Contest, Nader and Smith reveal a side of corporate law practice rarely discussed in the media or shown on Court TV. The authors put law firms in New York, Washington, D.C., Boston, Chicago, Houston, Los Angeles, Seattle, and around the world under the microscope. They show how the "power lawyers" are behind the erosion of the basic rights of access to true and timely justice for ordinary Americans and people the world over. The scope of the assault on workers' rights to organize, taxpayers and investors' need for sound financial institutions, patients' needs for competent health care, and consumers' needs for product safety is breathtaking. But it can be stopped. No Contest depicts dramatic personal struggles by lawyers of conscience to hold the law to its ideals of justice, and gives voice to the unheralded corporate lawyers who are resisting the corruption of their profession. Nader and Smith propose an extensive program of legal reform that will preserve access to justice for all Americans, unclog the congested courts, and guarantee that the right side - citizen or corporation, poor or rich - will prevail. No Contest is a book for all citizens who believe that justice under law is a big step on the road to reform of the American political process.

Publish Date
Publisher
Random House
Language
English
Pages
427

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Previews available in: English

Edition Availability
Cover of: No Contest
No Contest: Corporate Lawyers and the Perversion of Justice in America
December 22, 1998, Random House
in English
Cover of: No contest
No contest: corporate lawyers and the perversion of justice in America
1996, Random House
in English - 1st ed.

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Book Details


Edition Notes

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Published in
New York

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class
347.73/53, 347.30753
Library of Congress
KF299.I5 N33 1996, KF299.I5N33 1996

The Physical Object

Pagination
xxviii, 427 p. ;
Number of pages
427

Edition Identifiers

Open Library
OL792849M
Internet Archive
nocontestcorpora00nade
ISBN 10
0679429727
LCCN
95025432
OCLC/WorldCat
33245805
LibraryThing
561758
Goodreads
1888278

Work Identifiers

Work ID
OL2938869W

Work Description

Everyone who loves justice will get a big portion of food for thought with this deep outrage creating, well-researched work of Consumer activist and 1996 presidential candidate Ralph Nader and lawyer Smith. They expose the role of power lawyers and international corporations at the center of trends that have increased corporate power with time.. They declare that there is widespread belief among Americans that something is deeply wrong with the legal system, and criticize what the media called lawyer-aided corporate abuse; the tightening grip on American society of corporate law firms who have perfected the art of nullifying, misusing or breaking the law, while pretending to uphold it. Nader and Smith use human stories, accurate statistics, and common sense to provide an alternative set of reforms to open the system, streamline justice, and cut legal costs--all while guaranteeing Americans their day in court.

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