Sewer of Progress: Corporations, Institutionalized Corruption, and the Struggle for the Santiago River

Sewer of Progress: Corporations, Institutionalized Corruption, and the Struggle for the Santiago River

by Cindy McCulligh
Sewer of Progress: Corporations, Institutionalized Corruption, and the Struggle for the Santiago River

Sewer of Progress: Corporations, Institutionalized Corruption, and the Struggle for the Santiago River

by Cindy McCulligh

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Overview

A creative and comprehensive exploration of the institutional forces undermining the management of environments critical to public health.

For almost two decades, the citizens of Western Mexico have called for a cleanup of the Santiago River, a water source so polluted it emanates an overwhelming acidic stench. Toxic clouds of foam lift off the river in a strong wind. In Sewer of Progress, Cindy McCulligh examines why industrial dumping continues in the Santiago despite the corporate embrace of social responsibility and regulatory frameworks intended to mitigate environmental damage. The fault, she finds, lies in a disingenuous discourse of progress and development that privileges capitalist growth over the health and well-being of ecosystems.

Rooted in research on institutional behavior and corporate business practices, Sewer of Progress exposes a type of regulatory greenwashing that allows authorities to deflect accusations of environmental dumping while “regulated” dumping continues in an environment of legal certainty. For transnational corporations, this type of simulation allows companies to take advantage of double standards in environmental regulations, while presenting themselves as socially responsible and green global actors. Through this inversion, the Santiago and other rivers in Mexico have become sewers for urban and industrial waste. Institutionalized corruption, a concept McCulligh introduces in the book, is the main culprit, a system that permits and normalizes environmental degradation, specifically in the creation and enforcement of a regulatory framework for wastewater discharge that prioritizes private interests over the common good.

Through a research paradigm based in institutional ethnography and political ecology, Sewer of Progress provides a critical, in-depth look at the power relations subverting the role of the state in environmental regulation and the maintenance of public health.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780262545921
Publisher: MIT Press
Publication date: 07/25/2023
Pages: 346
Sales rank: 953,849
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.10(h) x 0.93(d)

About the Author

Cindy McCulligh is a professor researcher at the Center for Research and Advanced Studies in Social Anthropology (CIESAS) in Guadalajara, Mexico.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments ix
Abbreviations xi
Introduction: From "Mexican Niagara" to River of Death 1
1 Industrialization and Environmental Regulation in Mexico 37
2 Chronicle of a Struggle: The Negation and the Terror 81
3 (Un)regulated Environments and the Santiago River 119
4 The Enemy at Home: Regulatory Capture and Wastewater Discharge 169
5 Corporate Sustainability: Myths and Realities 205
6 Conclusions: The Road Ahead 247
Appendix: Methodological Strategy 263
Notes 275
References 287
Index 321

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

“‘Mexico’s Mississippi’ emits lead, arsenic, and benzene from 750 largely foreign-owned plants. McCulligh—thoroughly, brilliantly, gracefully—documents corporate/state collusion fomenting ‘environmental dumping’ in Mexico’s most populous, environmentally dead, hydrological region.”
—James M. Cypher, Professor Emeritus, Doctoral Program in Development Studies, Universidad Autónoma de Zacatecas, Mexico
 
“Grounded in detailed and well-documented empirical research, McCulligh presents a persuasive account of the political construction of one of Latin America’s most egregious examples of public-private collusion and the potentially irreversible consequences for human and non-human life.”
—Jose Esteban Castro, Emeritus Professor of Sociology, Newcastle University, UK
 
“With painstaking research, the author illuminates not only the authorities' criminal negligence and the industrial corporations' systematic cost shifting but also the local inhabitants’ persistence in their struggle for social justice and health.”
—Joan Martínez Alier, Professor, ICTA-Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Spain

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