Citizens Intent on Reforming Corporate Accountability (CIRCA)

Modified:  Monday, November 28, 2005 

More Information on What Some Other Organizations Are Doing about Corporate Personhood

Program on Corporations, Law and Democracy (POCLAD)

"I don't want to be corrupted in a society that has a nominal commitment to basic democratic values, but in reality only tolerates them and will deny those values to outsiders. It's a painful line to deliver: We do not live in a democracy. We live in a plutocracy. I wish it were not so."
--Ward Morehouse, co-founder of POCLAD
POCLAD has conducted much of its research in legal theory and corporate law, including the judicial doctrines dealing with the commerce clause, personhood, the business judgment rule, the prudent man rule, managerial prerogative and corporate property rights.

POCLAD argues that a U.S. Supreme Court decision in 1886 began a process of granting constitutional rights to corporations as if they were living persons. With their rights as "persons" combined with vastly greater financial and legal resources, corporations now exert much more influence than living people on legislation and court rulings. POCLAD seeks to abolish rights extended to corporations and to remove constitutional impediments preventing authentic democratic self-governance.

POCLAD has published a model legal brief to help citizen groups create winning organizing strategies by removing constitutional protections from corporations and allowing citizens to regain control of their communities.

You can find more information on the POCLAD site.

Ward Morehouse is the co-founder of POCLAD. You can read about his February, 2004 visit to Columbus, or you can read an article about him and POCLAD in the May/June 2003 issue of UU World.

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