By Pesticide Action Network North America
Corporate power is a major cause of health problems, according
to the October/December 2005 special issue of the International
Journal of Occupational and Environmental Health. Contributions
to the issue reveal how corporate structure results in pressure
to influence science and place the public at risk from pesticides,
lead, asbestos, toxic municipal sewage sludge, and other harmful
substances.
"Occupational and environmental health diseases are in fact
an outcome of a pervasive system of corporate priority setting,
decision making, and influence," state guest editors David
Egilman and Susanna Rankin Bohme. "This system produces disease
because political, economic, regulatory, and ideological norms
prioritize values of wealth and profit over human health and environmental
well-being."
Skip Spitzer, Program Coordinator at PAN North America and a
contributing author to the journal notes that, "In market
economies, private corporations play such a decisive role in the
economic sphere that they are often able to secure more rights
than people. Corporations deeply influence politics, law, media,
public relations, science, research, education and other institutions.
It's no surprise that corporate self interest routinely supersedes
social and environmental welfare."
In his article "A Systemic Approach to Occupational and
Environmental Health", Spitzer describes how corporations
are part of a "structure of harm", meaning that the
very way in which corporations are structured produces social
and environmental problems and undermines reform. The pressure
to compete in the marketplace and create demand for their products
creates incentives for corporations to shape the political system,
the mass media, and science for commercial ends. Corporations
use this power to avoid taking responsibility for the larger environmental
and social impacts of their actions (or "externalities"),
including the public health impacts of developing dangerous new
technologies. Spitzer quotes Reagan administration economist Robert
Monks describing the corporation as "an externalizing machine,
the same way that a shark is a killing machine - no malevolence...just
something designed with sublime efficiency for self-preservation,
which it accomplishes without any capacity to factor in the consequences
to others."
This "structure of harm" creates incentives for corporations
to seek political influence over institutions designed to protect
and serve the public good. Corporations often use this power to
influence scientific debates so as to avoid regulation and litigation.
"Science is a key part of this system," note Egilman
and Bohme, "there is a substantial tradition of manipulation
of evidence, data, and analysis ultimately designed to maintain
favorable conditions for industry at both material and ideological
levels." Independent scientists whose findings counter corporate
interests often face pitched battles to obtain funding, publish
their research, and gain academic tenure.
The corporate "structure of harm" undermines health
protections not only domestically, but also by influencing the
international agreements and treaties that shape the global economy.
In her article "Who's Afraid of National Laws?", Erika
Rosenthal, a frequent consultant to PAN in North, Central and
South America, identifies how pesticide corporations are using
trade agreements to block proposed bans on pesticides identified
as the worst occupational health hazards in Central America. Through
privileged access to closed-door negotiations, agrichemical corporations
inserted deregulatory mechanisms into the draft Central American
Customs Union and the Central American Free Trade Agreement. These
agreements undermine health-based national pesticide registration
requirements, weaken health ministries' role in pesticide control,
block marketing of cheaper and less toxic pesticides, and have
a chilling effect on future pesticide regulation. Rosenthal argues
that as long as corporations have privileged access to trade negotiations
and civil society is excluded, the resulting agreements will benefit
special interests at the expense of public health.
The editors conclude that corporate corruption of science is
widespread and touches many aspects of our lives, as indicated
by the range of articles in the issue. In "Genetic Engineering
in Agriculture and Corporate Engineering in Public Debate",
Rajeev Patel, Robert Torres, and Peter Rosset analyze Monsanto's
efforts to convince the public of the safety of genetically modified
crops. Other articles describe how industry pressure on government
agencies such as EPA have influenced cancer research and resulted
in approving toxic municipal sewage sludge as crop fertilizer.
Corporate corruption of science represents a real threat to the
health and well-being of people and to the environment the world
over. "The negative social impacts of corporate structures
deserve a concerted response on the part of conscientious public
health researchers," note Egilman and Bohme. Spitzer sees
this analysis as a call for researchers to join movements working
for fundamental change of corporate structure and power. "We
need to build bigger, more integrated social movements with the
popular wherewithal to make deep change," he states. "This
means combining multiple issues, connecting local work nationally
and internationally, and building long-term change goals into
action for more immediate change."
Source: International Journal of Occupational and Environmental
Health, http://www.ijoeh.com/
Contact:PANNA