
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Honduras is being sued for a third of its GDP by an American company—why?
Because the developing nation changed its mind about Prospera building a charter city on its territory. This case, which could bankrupt Honduras, will be judged in a back room of the World Bank by three people, none of whom are obliged to even have a law degree.
Matt Kennard, investigative journalist and author of Silent Coup: How Corporations Overthrew Democracy, explains the origin of this shadowy legal system, and how it has infiltrated politics, skews policies, and traps developing nations into exploitative relationships with some of the world’s biggest corporations, definitively undermining the democratic process.
Planet: Critical investigates why the world is in crisis—and what to do about it. Support the project with a paid subscription.
4.8
7474 ratings
Honduras is being sued for a third of its GDP by an American company—why?
Because the developing nation changed its mind about Prospera building a charter city on its territory. This case, which could bankrupt Honduras, will be judged in a back room of the World Bank by three people, none of whom are obliged to even have a law degree.
Matt Kennard, investigative journalist and author of Silent Coup: How Corporations Overthrew Democracy, explains the origin of this shadowy legal system, and how it has infiltrated politics, skews policies, and traps developing nations into exploitative relationships with some of the world’s biggest corporations, definitively undermining the democratic process.
Planet: Critical investigates why the world is in crisis—and what to do about it. Support the project with a paid subscription.
560 Listeners
1,151 Listeners
162 Listeners
1,486 Listeners
1,738 Listeners
355 Listeners
469 Listeners
607 Listeners
2,190 Listeners
457 Listeners
128 Listeners
167 Listeners
372 Listeners
186 Listeners
31 Listeners