An important and empowering history of and guide to the battle for our
right to safe products and conditions--for younger readers.
Corporations enter our daily lives from the moment we wake up until we
turn off the lights at night. Large Internet companies, health insurance
companies, fuel and transportation companies--all play a role in our
lives every moment of every single day. And yet what power do we have
over their actions or intentions? None, except through redress in a
court of law for any harm they may have done. This area of the law is
known as torts, from the French word for wrongs.
Power to the People! offers a deep understanding of how civil actions
work, through many examples and straightforward language for the
middle-grade student reader. From Ralph Nader's 1966 law-changing
address to Congress on automobile safety (it's thanks to Nader that we
wear seat belts) to the decades-long battle to raise awareness of the
risks of smoking (cigarette and cigar smoke contains over 7,000
chemicals, and has caused the deaths of more than 2.5 million nonsmokers
in the last half-century), readers will learn how we must fight to
protect ourselves from corporations that are more concerned with profit
than our safety. Corporate America will listen, Panchyk argues, but only
if we make ourselves heard. Power to the People! explores all the ways
we the people can be powerful, too.