RT Article T1 Regulatory theater in the pork industry: how the capitalist state harms workers, farmers, and unions JF Crime, law and social change VO 78 IS 5 SP 599 OP 619 A1 Ken, Ivy A2 León, Kenneth Sebastian LA English YR 2022 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1824457960 AB The United States pork sector generates billions of pounds of food and billions of dollars of sales and tax revenue per year. This industry has also generated hundreds of workers’ deaths from covid infections, thousands of workers’ injuries from hazardous working conditions, economic and environmental depletion of communities near production sites, and the massive decline of small hog farming operations - not to mention over a billion tons of fecal waste per year. Although pork companies, like most firms in the food industry, portray state regulation as a burden for commercial interests, we identify how the pork industry enjoys a symbiotic relationship with the state to create favorable conditions for three interrelated processes: 1) monopoly and monopsony power; 2) hyper-efficient but injurious working conditions; 3) union busting. Using structural contradictions theory, we explain the failure to protect workers, farmers, and communities as a feature of the fundamental contradiction between protection and accumulation within the capitalist state. We argue that the solution to pork industry harms is not more regulation but the outright replacement of currently existing capitalism. NO Literaturverzeichnis: Seite 615-619 K1 Capital K1 Meatpacking K1 Pork industry K1 Regulatory theater K1 State-corporate crime K1 Structural contradictions K1 Unions DO 10.1007/s10611-022-10019-0