Power Play
Sharon Beder
'Lucidly written, strongly argued, highly informative and deeply alarming.'
Merle Rubin (Los Angeles Times)'Beder has written a brilliant global history of the catastrophic consequences of neo-liberal fundamentalism.'
Mike DavisNoted author Sharon Beder argues persuasively that the track record of electricity privatisation and deregulation around the world indicates that it is a confidence trick. Her book shows how simplistic ideology and economic theory have been used to mask the pursuit of self-interest; how control of electricity has been wrested from public hands to create profit opportunities for investors and multinational corporations; and how an essential public service has been turned into a speculative commodity in the name of ‘reform’.
Power Play explores the battles between private and public ownership in the United States, the United Kingdom, and Australia since the early twentieth century, and the agenda-setting and public relations strategies involved. It investigates the way that developing countries such as Brazil and India have been forced to allow foreign investors to exercise a stranglehold over their electricity systems. And it uncovers the campaigns waged by think tanks, corporate interests, and multinational companies such as Enron to swindle the public in dozens of countries out of rightful control over an essential public service.
Sharon Beder
Sharon Beder is a professional engineer and associate professor in Science, Technology, and Society at the University of Wollongong. She is the author of several books, including The Nature of Sustainable Development, Global Spin, Selling the Work Ethic, and Power Play (all published by Scribe).
In 2001 she was presented with the World Technology Award in Ethics, and in 2003 she was named in the Bulletin magazine’s ‘Smart 100’ list as one of Australia's top environmental thinkers. In 2004 she was listed by Engineers Australia as one of the 100 ‘most influential engineers’ in Australia.
Many of Dr Beder's articles are available on the internet at http://homepage.mac.com/herinst/sbeder/home.html