In recent decades, law has ceased to be the framework that regulates power and has progressively become an instrument subordinate to it. This book analyzes how modern states have ceded essential functions—normative, jurisdictional, and coercive—to private and supranational entities, giving rise to a new order where law no longer emanates from political will or the social contract, but from corporate interests.
Through a legal, historical, and philosophical approach, the work examines the transformation of law into a mere management technique, the erosion of state sovereignty, and the dissolution of the citizen as a subject of rights, replaced by the figure of the consumer, the user, or the human resource. This is not an ideological denunciation, but rather a structural X-ray of the process by which law loses its guarantee function and is integrated into a market logic. *Corporatization and the Elimination of Law* does not offer simple answers or institutional nostalgia. Its aim is more unsettling: to show how the erosion of the legal system occurs silently, legally, and progressively, until the exception becomes the norm and the norm a mere formality with no real capacity to limit power.
This first volume lays the conceptual groundwork for a broader reflection on the mutation of the contemporary legal order and its political, social, and human consequences.
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