A state governed by representatives not of geographical areas but of vocational corporations of the employers and employees in each trade, profession, or industry.
公司国家;法人国家(由各个行业而非地域的代表团体统治的国家)
Example sentencesExamples
I would argue that I don't live in a democracy but a corporate state.
The corporate state they are working to create is formally based on democratic rhetoric, constitutionalism, and free elections, but it is profoundly anti-democratic in practice.
The extent of corporate influence raises the question, to what extent are we living in a corporate state, and what might the implications be for democratic process and citizenship?
The entire thrust of German policy since the 60s has been towards a corporate state.
Rather than vanishing, the government becomes symbiotic with the corporations: a corporate state.
Somehow, the fates, or maybe evil geniuses in the corporate state, allocate money to some people and keep it away from others, to make people unequal and perpetuate an elitist system.
That's what we're up against: the corporate state.
Start where the public is; tie the corporate state mentality to local issues that your community cares about; I guarantee there are links.
Corporation and income taxes, he argues, prompted the creation of the final element in the corporate state.
The point is that no votes will take place at all, merely consultations within the corporate state.
The aloof and pampered executives who run today's autocratic and secretive corporate states have effectively become our sovereigns.
I have believed for a long time that we are not living in a democracy, but in a corporate state.
Is this a slippery slope toward a corporate state in which our employers control everything we do?
We live in a corporate state, and they control everything.
With the freedom of the erstwhile colonies, the corporations and corporate states had to find a new means to dominate the world.
It's one thing to document how the corporate state threatens each of us and the world as a whole; it's quite another level of achievement to lay out the ways to fight back.
It just goes to show to what extent even freedom of speech has been thwarted in the corporate state we live in.
Aside from Noam Chomsky's work as a linguist, he is a great critic of US foreign policy, the corporate state, and the media establishment.
The mainstream press takes a slant that's pro the corporate state because they are part of it.
Both are corporate states whose business structures, forged in industrial times, have proved wholly unsuited to the different demands of information societies.