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Mc Libel: Burger Culture On Trial
John Vidal

Issue #0

Mc Libel: Burger Culture On Trial

New Press (1997)
9781565844117
| Hardcover
354 pages | 65 x 96 mm | English
Dewey 342.420853
LC Classification KD379.5.M33 .V53 1997
LC Control No. 97069259

Subject

  • Corporations
  • Economics/Corporations
  • McDonald's Corporation

Plot

McLibel is the unlikely but true story of how a pamphlet called "What's Wrong with McDonald's?" led to the longest trial in British history. In what has become front-page news around the globe, the trial pitted the multibillion dollar corporation against five members of London Greenpeace accused by McDonald's of libel. Three activists capitulated and apologized; two persevered. McLibel tells the story of the "McLibel Two" and the two-and-a-half-year trial in which the jeans-clad and impoverished defendants represented themselves against the best powdered-wig lawyers McDonald's could buy. Does the fast-food chain exploit children? Depress wages? Level South and Central American rain forests? Subject its cattle and chicken to mass slaughters? A final chapter explores these allegations and details the $98,000 verdict against the activists Morris and Steel, which is widely viewed as a moral victory for the defendants and a public relations fiasco for McDonald's. Environmental reporter John Vidal covered all two and a half years of the trial. In the tradition of Michael Moore's Roger and Me, he brings this David and Goliath story to life, shedding light on the corporate machinations of a secretive multinational company, the British legal system, and the implications for any individuals inclined to critique a $30-billion-a-year powerhouse.

Personal

Location 340 VID
Index 16004
Added Date Oct 02, 2018 14:59:28
Modified Date Jan 15, 2019 08:20:08