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  <title>The [F]law</title>

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  <itunes:author>Critical Corporate Theory Lab - Jon Hanson - Systemic Justice Project</itunes:author>
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  <description><![CDATA[<p><em>The [F]law</em> is the product of the <a href="https://systemicjustice.org/"><b>Systemic Justice Project</b></a> and Harvard Law School students concerned about the harms caused by corporate interests and the law’s role in empowering corporations.&nbsp;<br><br></p><p><em>The [F]law’</em>s primary mission is to share stories that reveal how corporate law and power create social problems and systemic injustices. We publish pieces that identify how corporate power has infiltrated social and political institutions, analyze how it controls them, and propose methods for dismantling corporate control &amp; building collective power.</p><p><br></p><p><em>The [F]law Podcast </em>is devoted to hosting conversations with lawyers, organizers, and activists devoted to challenging corporations that exert their power to create injustice.</p>]]></description>
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    <itunes:title>The Synthetic Epidemic: The U.S. vs. Big Pharma - A Conversation with Randy Ramseyer </itunes:title>
    <title>The Synthetic Epidemic: The U.S. vs. Big Pharma - A Conversation with Randy Ramseyer </title>
    <itunes:summary><![CDATA[The [F]law podcast team sits down with Randy Ramseyer to discuss the US government’s litigation efforts against pharmaceutical companies.  Randy Ramseyer is a AUSA who brought the first case against Purdue Pharma in 2006. This case required Purdue to pay out $600 million for intentionally misleading the public and using fraudulent marketing to promote their prescription opioid, Oxycontin.  Randy Ramseyer has also brought multiple cases against other pharmaceutical companies, one whi...]]></itunes:summary>
    <description><![CDATA[<p>The [F]law podcast team sits down with Randy Ramseyer to discuss the US government’s litigation efforts against pharmaceutical companies. </p><p>Randy Ramseyer is a AUSA who brought the first case against Purdue Pharma in 2006. This case required Purdue to pay out $600 million for intentionally misleading the public and using fraudulent marketing to promote their prescription opioid, Oxycontin.  Randy Ramseyer has also brought multiple cases against other pharmaceutical companies, one which resulted in a CEO being sent to prison. Ramseyer and his work in the Purdue Pharma case were featured in the popular Hulu mini-series, Dopesick. </p><p><br/><b>To learn more about the government’s fight against pharmaceutical companies: </b><a href='https://www.nytimes.com/2022/03/03/health/sacklers-purdue-oxycontin-settlement.html'><b>Purdue Pharma Settlement</b></a></p><p><br/><b>Episode credits:</b></p><ul><li><b>Hosted and Edited by Hannah Justus</b></li><li><b>Music by Sean Healey</b></li><li><b>Special Thanks to Liz Turner and Andrew Rossi-Schroeder </b></li></ul><p>The Flaw Podcast is a publication of <a href='https://theflaw.org/'><em>The Flaw</em>,</a> an online magazine that shares stories that reveal how corporate law and power create social problems and systemic injustices. The Flaw publishes pieces that identify how corporate power has infiltrated social and political institutions, analyzes how it controls them, and proposes methods for dismantling corporate control &amp; building collective power. The Flaw is the product of the <a href='https://systemicjustice.org/'>Systemic Justice Project</a> and Harvard Law School students concerned about the harms caused by corporate interests and the law’s role in empowering corporations, with Professor Jon Hanson serving as Editor-in-Chief and Director.<br/><br/><b>Learn more about </b><b><em>The [F]law Podcast</em></b><b> on our </b><a href='https://theflaw.org/?page_id=2292&amp;preview=true'><b>website</b></a><b>. </b></p>]]></description>
    <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The [F]law podcast team sits down with Randy Ramseyer to discuss the US government’s litigation efforts against pharmaceutical companies. </p><p>Randy Ramseyer is a AUSA who brought the first case against Purdue Pharma in 2006. This case required Purdue to pay out $600 million for intentionally misleading the public and using fraudulent marketing to promote their prescription opioid, Oxycontin.  Randy Ramseyer has also brought multiple cases against other pharmaceutical companies, one which resulted in a CEO being sent to prison. Ramseyer and his work in the Purdue Pharma case were featured in the popular Hulu mini-series, Dopesick. </p><p><br/><b>To learn more about the government’s fight against pharmaceutical companies: </b><a href='https://www.nytimes.com/2022/03/03/health/sacklers-purdue-oxycontin-settlement.html'><b>Purdue Pharma Settlement</b></a></p><p><br/><b>Episode credits:</b></p><ul><li><b>Hosted and Edited by Hannah Justus</b></li><li><b>Music by Sean Healey</b></li><li><b>Special Thanks to Liz Turner and Andrew Rossi-Schroeder </b></li></ul><p>The Flaw Podcast is a publication of <a href='https://theflaw.org/'><em>The Flaw</em>,</a> an online magazine that shares stories that reveal how corporate law and power create social problems and systemic injustices. The Flaw publishes pieces that identify how corporate power has infiltrated social and political institutions, analyzes how it controls them, and proposes methods for dismantling corporate control &amp; building collective power. The Flaw is the product of the <a href='https://systemicjustice.org/'>Systemic Justice Project</a> and Harvard Law School students concerned about the harms caused by corporate interests and the law’s role in empowering corporations, with Professor Jon Hanson serving as Editor-in-Chief and Director.<br/><br/><b>Learn more about </b><b><em>The [F]law Podcast</em></b><b> on our </b><a href='https://theflaw.org/?page_id=2292&amp;preview=true'><b>website</b></a><b>. </b></p>]]></content:encoded>
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    <itunes:author>Critical Corporate Theory Lab - Jon Hanson - Systemic Justice Project</itunes:author>
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    <pubDate>Sun, 29 Oct 2023 20:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
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    <itunes:duration>1818</itunes:duration>
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    <itunes:title>The Corporate Kill Shot: Chevron vs. Steven Donziger</itunes:title>
    <title>The Corporate Kill Shot: Chevron vs. Steven Donziger</title>
    <itunes:summary><![CDATA[The [F]law  podcast team sits down with Steven Donziger to discuss his litigation efforts against Chevron and his subsequent detainment by the US government.  Steven Donziger is a human rights lawyer who has spent the last three decades in a protracted fight to hold Chevron, an American oil company accountable for wreaking devastation on indigenous communities and farmland in the Ecuadorian Amazon. Beginning in the 1970s, Texaco, now owned by Chevron, began drilling for oil in the Amazon...]]></itunes:summary>
    <description><![CDATA[<p><em>The [F]law</em>  podcast team sits down with Steven Donziger to discuss his litigation efforts against Chevron and his subsequent detainment by the US government.<br/><br/>Steven Donziger is a human rights lawyer who has spent the last three decades in a protracted fight to hold Chevron, an American oil company accountable for wreaking devastation on indigenous communities and farmland in the Ecuadorian Amazon. Beginning in the 1970s, Texaco, now owned by Chevron, began drilling for oil in the Amazon. As a result, rural farmers and indigenous communities were victims of an enormous ecological catastrophe. Chevron dumped billions of gallons of hazardous oil waste and millions of gallons of crude oil on Amazonian land leading to toxic pollution that contributed to widespread illness among the Ecuadorian people. When Steven Donziger visited the region, he described the landscape as an apocalyptic disaster. In response to Chevron&apos;s pollution, Donziger and a team of like-minded lawyers brought a class action lawsuit on behalf of over 30,000 indigenous people and rural farmers in Ecuador against Chevron. In legal documents, Donziger&apos;s team contended that Chevron&apos;s activity created an &quot;Amazon Chernobyl&quot; spanning 1700 square miles. Although in 2011, Donziger was able to initially win an $18 billion judgment against the oil company in Ecuadorian court. Chevron has since spent hundreds of millions of dollars to evade accountability, paying dozens of law firms to use a variety of novel and nefarious legal tactics to help complete its campaign to destroy Steven Donziger and his work.<br/><br/><b>To learn more about Steven Donziger and the fight for environmental justice in Ecuador:</b></p><ul><li><a href='https://www.freedonziger.com/'><b>Free Donziger</b></a></li><li><a href='https://video.vice.com/en_ca/video/amazon-rainforest-oil-disaster-chevron/5f35d23cbfb3245f632e3449'><b>Vice Video - The World’s Worst Oil Disaster You’ve Never Heard Of</b></a></li></ul><p><b>Episode credits:</b></p><ul><li><b>Hosted by Andrew Rossi-Schroeder</b></li><li><b>Produced by Liz Turner</b></li><li><b>Edited by Liz Turner and Sean Healey</b></li><li><b>Music by Sean Healey</b></li></ul><p><em>The [F]law Podcast</em> is the audio arm of <em>The [F]law</em>, an online magazine that shares stories that reveal how corporate law and power create social problems and systemic injustices. <em>The [F]law</em> publishes pieces that identify how corporate power has infiltrated social and political institutions, analyzes how it controls them, and proposes methods for dismantling corporate control &amp; building collective power. <em>The [F]law</em> is the product of the <a href='https://systemicjustice.org/'>Systemic Justice Project</a> and the Critical Corporate Theory Lab at Harvard Law School. Through conversations with lawyers, journalists, organizers, and community advocates, we share stories that reveal how corporate law and power create social harms and systemic injustices.<br/><b><br/>Learn more about </b><b><em>The [F]law Podcast</em></b><b> on our </b><a href='https://theflaw.org/?page_id=2292&amp;preview=true'><b>website</b></a><b>. </b></p>]]></description>
    <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>The [F]law</em>  podcast team sits down with Steven Donziger to discuss his litigation efforts against Chevron and his subsequent detainment by the US government.<br/><br/>Steven Donziger is a human rights lawyer who has spent the last three decades in a protracted fight to hold Chevron, an American oil company accountable for wreaking devastation on indigenous communities and farmland in the Ecuadorian Amazon. Beginning in the 1970s, Texaco, now owned by Chevron, began drilling for oil in the Amazon. As a result, rural farmers and indigenous communities were victims of an enormous ecological catastrophe. Chevron dumped billions of gallons of hazardous oil waste and millions of gallons of crude oil on Amazonian land leading to toxic pollution that contributed to widespread illness among the Ecuadorian people. When Steven Donziger visited the region, he described the landscape as an apocalyptic disaster. In response to Chevron&apos;s pollution, Donziger and a team of like-minded lawyers brought a class action lawsuit on behalf of over 30,000 indigenous people and rural farmers in Ecuador against Chevron. In legal documents, Donziger&apos;s team contended that Chevron&apos;s activity created an &quot;Amazon Chernobyl&quot; spanning 1700 square miles. Although in 2011, Donziger was able to initially win an $18 billion judgment against the oil company in Ecuadorian court. Chevron has since spent hundreds of millions of dollars to evade accountability, paying dozens of law firms to use a variety of novel and nefarious legal tactics to help complete its campaign to destroy Steven Donziger and his work.<br/><br/><b>To learn more about Steven Donziger and the fight for environmental justice in Ecuador:</b></p><ul><li><a href='https://www.freedonziger.com/'><b>Free Donziger</b></a></li><li><a href='https://video.vice.com/en_ca/video/amazon-rainforest-oil-disaster-chevron/5f35d23cbfb3245f632e3449'><b>Vice Video - The World’s Worst Oil Disaster You’ve Never Heard Of</b></a></li></ul><p><b>Episode credits:</b></p><ul><li><b>Hosted by Andrew Rossi-Schroeder</b></li><li><b>Produced by Liz Turner</b></li><li><b>Edited by Liz Turner and Sean Healey</b></li><li><b>Music by Sean Healey</b></li></ul><p><em>The [F]law Podcast</em> is the audio arm of <em>The [F]law</em>, an online magazine that shares stories that reveal how corporate law and power create social problems and systemic injustices. <em>The [F]law</em> publishes pieces that identify how corporate power has infiltrated social and political institutions, analyzes how it controls them, and proposes methods for dismantling corporate control &amp; building collective power. <em>The [F]law</em> is the product of the <a href='https://systemicjustice.org/'>Systemic Justice Project</a> and the Critical Corporate Theory Lab at Harvard Law School. Through conversations with lawyers, journalists, organizers, and community advocates, we share stories that reveal how corporate law and power create social harms and systemic injustices.<br/><b><br/>Learn more about </b><b><em>The [F]law Podcast</em></b><b> on our </b><a href='https://theflaw.org/?page_id=2292&amp;preview=true'><b>website</b></a><b>. </b></p>]]></content:encoded>
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    <itunes:author>Jon</itunes:author>
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    <pubDate>Sun, 19 Mar 2023 18:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
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    <itunes:duration>2749</itunes:duration>
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