- Corporate statism
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Corporatism SchoolsChristian corporatism · Conservative corporatism · Fascism · Liberal corporatism · Social corporatism · Solidarism · Corporate statism · Syndicalism · Tripartism · Corporate nationalismPeopleRelated articlesPolitics portal v · political culture and a form of corporatism whose adherents hold that the corporate group is the basis of society and the state. The corporate group is typically comprised by political-economic power elites, for example those represented by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. In other countries, the corporate group may be a specific national or ethnic group. As with other political cultures, societies have existed historically which exemplified corporate statism, for instance as developed by Othmar Spann and Benito Mussolini.
Corporate statism most commonly manifests itself as a ruling party acting as a mediator between the workers, capitalists and other prominent state interests by institutionally incorporating them into the ruling mechanism. Corporatist systems were most prevalent in the mid-20th Century in Europe and later elsewhere in developing countries. However, both in academia and practice, Corporate Statism (or Corporatism as it is also sometimes known) has fallen out of favour.[citation needed] Globalisation and economic and social diversification are both credited with corporate statism's decline.[citation needed] According to this critique, interests, both social and economic, are so diverse that a state cannot possibly mediate between them effectively through incorporating them.[citation needed] Social conflicts go beyond incorporated dichotomies of labour and capital to include innumerable groups. Furthermore, globalisation presents challenges, both social and economic, that a corporate state cannot sufficiently address because these problems transcend state borders and approaches.[citation needed] It therefore differs from Corporate nationalism in that it is a social mode of organization rather than an economic nationalism through private business corporations.
See also
- Company town
- Corporatism
- Statism
- State syndicalism
References
v · corporations See also: template Aspects of occupations · template Aspects of organizations · template Aspects of workplaces · template Corporate titlesAbuse · Appointeeship · Censorship · Citizenship · Communication · Crime · Design · Entertainment · Ethics · Identity · Interlocks · Liability · Narcissism · Nationalism · Opportunity · Pathos · Promoter · Propaganda · Raid · Recovery · Resolution · Scandal · Security · Services · Social entrepreneurship · Social media · Social responsibility · Sourcing · Statism · Sustainability · Synergy · Tax · Taxonomy · Title · Trainer · Transparency · Travel · Trust · Veil · VideoCategories:- Political science terms
- Corporatism
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Corporate Statism — is an approach to state organization, the likes of which Othmar Spann, Benito Mussolini and others are credited with developing. Corporate Statism involves the ruling party acting as a mediator between the workers, capitalists and other prominent … Wikipedia
Corporate nationalism — Not to be confused with Business nationalism. Corporatism … Wikipedia
Corporate governance — Not to be confused with corporate statism, a corporate approach to government rather than the government of a corporation Corporate governance is a number of processes, customs, policies, laws, and institutions which have impact on the way a… … Wikipedia
Corporate communication — is the message issued by a corporate organization, body, or institute to its publics. Publics can be both internal (employees, stakeholders, i.e. share and stock holders) and external (agencies, channel partners, media, government, industry… … Wikipedia
Corporate citizenship — is a term used to describe a company s role in, or responsibilities towards society. For this reason it is sometimes used interchangeably with corporate social responsibility, and in fact many companies including Microsoft, IBM and Novartis have… … Wikipedia
Corporate sustainability — is a business approach that creates long term consumer and employee value by not only creating a green strategy aimed towards the natural environment, but taking into consideration every dimension of how a business operates in the social,… … Wikipedia
Corporate video — production refers to audio visual corporate communications material (such as DVD, High definition video, streaming video[1] or other media) commissioned primarily for a use by a company, corporation or organisation. A corporate video is often… … Wikipedia
Corporate security — identifies and effectively mitigates or manages, at an early stage, any developments that may threaten the resilience and continued survival of a corporation. It is a corporate function that oversees and manages the close coordination of all… … Wikipedia
Corporate design — of the City council of Kehrsatz A corporate design is the official graphical design of the logo and name of a company or institution used on letterheads, envelopes, forms, folders, brochures, etc. The house style is created in such a way that all … Wikipedia
Corporate services — are activities that combine or consolidate certain enterprise wide needed support services, provided based on specialized knowledge, best practices, and technology to serve internal (and sometimes external) customers and business partners. In the … Wikipedia
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Corporate statism
- Corporate statism
-
Corporatism SchoolsChristian corporatism · Conservative corporatism · Fascism · Liberal corporatism · Social corporatism · Solidarism · Corporate statism · Syndicalism · Tripartism · Corporate nationalismPeopleRelated articlesPolitics portal