Still Dying for a Living

Corporate Criminal Liability after the Westray Mine Disaster

Steven Bittle author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:University of British Columbia Press

Published:16th Oct '12

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Still Dying for a Living cover

A shrewd and revealing interrogation of corporate criminal liability in the wake of one of the most devastating workplace disasters in Canadian history.

Still Dying for a Living investigates the state’s (in)ability to develop effective legal strategies for holding corporations accountable for serious injury and death in the workplace.

In 1992, a preventable explosion at the Westray Mine in Plymouth, Nova Scotia, killed twenty-six miners. More than a decade later, the government introduced revisions to the Criminal Code of Canada aimed at strengthening corporate criminal liability. Bill C-45, dubbed the Westray bill, requires employers to ensure a safe workplace and attributes criminal liability to organizations for seriously injuring or killing workers and/or the public.

In Still Dying for a Living, Steven Bittle turns a critical eye on Canada’s corporate criminal liability law. Interweaving Foucauldian and neo-Marxist literatures with in-depth interviews and parliamentary transcripts, Bittle reveals how various legal, economic, and cultural discourses surrounding the Westray bill downplayed the seriousness of workplace injury and death, effectively characterizing these crimes as regrettable but largely unavoidable accidents. As long as the primary causes of workplace injury and death are not properly scrutinized, Bittle argues, workers will continue to die in the pursuit of earning a living.

  • Winner of Outstanding Publication of the year, National White Collar Crime Consortium (NWCCC) 2014

ISBN: 9780774823593

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 520g

268 pages