Giving corporate agents their due -- and only their due /

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Pettit, Philip, 1945- author.
Imprint:[Chicago, Illinois] : Law School, University of Chicago, Feb. 28, 2013.
Description:1 online resource (video file) (1 hr., 9 secs.)
Language:English
Series:Dewey lecture ; 2013
Dewey lecture (University of Chicago. Law School) ; 2013.
Subject:
Format: E-Resource Video Streaming Video
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/11331338
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Other authors / contributors:University of Chicago. Law School, hosting institution.
Notes:Lecture recorded on Feb. 28, 3013; posted on the Law School podcast list April 11, 2013; introductions by Michael Shill and Martha Nussbaum.
Descption based on online resource; title from title screen (Sept. 25, 2017).
Summary:"Suitably organized, corporate groups mimic the capacities of individual persons and operate as agents with minds of their own. And in order to function in this agential manner, they have to be assigned legal rights that they can assert or transfer or waive in their dealings with others. But corporate bodies do not have a claim to rights on the same basis as individuals and neither, consequently, do they have a claim to the same range of rights. Notwithstanding their functional similarity to natural persons, they should be denied anything like the same status in law."--Law School webpage Faculty podcasts.
Other form:Audio