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When Companies Rule
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Format:
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Publication Date: 10 November 2026
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ISBN: 9780231222907
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Pages: 328
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Imprint: Columbia University Press

Company towns are back. From Indian oil refineries to Kenyan canned food factories to Amazon warehouses, companies today rule over the daily lives of around a million people. In these enclaves of unregulated corporate power, bosses suspend workers’ health care to break up strikes, police residents’ sex lives, and control what children learn in school. These stories echo those of colonial-era companies that ruled whole countries with private armies—and raise fears for the rights of workers and citizens today.
In When Companies Rule, Maha Rafi Atal blends investigative journalism and historical research to tell the gripping four-hundred-year story of company rule over daily life. Atal argues that we have misunderstood what makes corporations powerful. Corporations are not rational profit-seekers pursuing their business needs. Instead, corporate rulers are trying to build their own ideal societies. These utopian visions shape not only how managers rule but also whether people in these communities accept their authority. Managers’ moral values and personal ambitions, not the pursuit of profit, are the ultimate source of companies’ political power.
Atal illustrates this argument with examples ranging from the East India Company to Silicon Valley, and she explores what superpowerful corporations in science fiction reveal about real-world company rule. This book offers a new account of how corporate power works—and what we can do to limit it.
— Henry Farrell, coauthor of Underground Empire: How America Weaponized the World Economy
Introduction
Part I. The Corporation and the State
1. The Body and the Bodies: The Company-State in the Early Modern Period
2. In the Zone: The Political Geography of Company Rule
Part II. Utopia, Model Societies, and Corporate Futurism
3. The Formation of Character: Robert Owen and Postrevolutionary Utopia
4. The Golden Cage: Labor Control and Social Utopia in an Indian Oil Town
5. Public and/or Private: Solutionism in Silicon Valley
Part III. Security, Surveillance, and Resistance
6. Organization Man: Industrial Company Towns in the Cold War
7. Under the Elephant Trunk: Land, Labor, and the Securitization of Welfare in Kenya
Part IV. Deconstructing the Corporation
8. Weak Partners: Private Law and Modern Slavery in Southern Africa
9. White Capital: Corporate Social Responsibility and the Limits of Transformation in Post-Apartheid South Africa
Conclusion: Corporations of Our Making
Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index