Colonial and Patriarchal Dimensions of State-Corporate Harm
Embodying the Powerful in the Global Asbestos Crisis
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Bristol University Press
Publishing:1st Sep '26
£85.00
This title is due to be published on 1st September, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

This powerful book examines the global asbestos industry's devastating impact on health, communities, and ecosystems, exposing how corporations and governments collaborate to silence victims while prioritizing profits. Drawing on research from Brazil and Italy, it reveals how race, gender and social privilege determine which harms are recognized and which are tolerated.
Grounded in Black feminist and decolonial thought, the book uses the asbestos industry as a lens to expose colonial male-dictions—narratives that shield powerful actors from accountability. Beyond a story of victims versus corporations, it offers a radical reimagining of state-corporate harm through memory and transformative justice.
"Marília De Nardin Budó explores in depth the corporate crimes and harms involved in the asbestos industry in Brazil and Italy, and provides a powerful testimony of the victimisation and struggles for justice that followed." Ragnhild Sollund, University of Oslo
'Budó’s study of state-corporate harm and Brazil’s asbestos industry breaks new theoretical ground as it employs the first decolonial and ecofeminist analysis.' Gregg Barak, author of Unchecked Corporate Power
ISBN: 9781529230956
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
224 pages