Jonathan Marks: In praise of conflict
Jonathan Marks works at the intersections of ethics, law and policy -- writing and speaking about torture, obesity, fracking, health care and other pressing issues of our time. Full bio
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and human rights lawyer
by an accident of history,
who had just quit his job
one morning and said,
about human rights abuses in China."
about human rights abuses in China
trade relations with China."
with his tail between his legs,
he returned again to his boss,
about human rights in Burma,"
do anything about human rights in Burma
any trade relations with Burma."
he knew he had to leave.
that got to him.
with other governments,
were being harmed.
a vision of the world.
who are not at the table,
an obligation to protect.
somewhat skeptical of a lawyer
giving talks about ethics for free.
I'm downwardly mobile.
we lead our personal lives,
to one side for the moment,
we think about major problems
in the United States,
three branches of government,
and the judicial branch.
more sacred in our Constitution,
and the judicial powers."
and exercise of power.
the perils of influence.
the constitutionality of laws
of government accountable
relationships with them.
as one famous scholar put it,
struggle with each other.
the importance of struggle
get together and agree
below 250 dollars a ticket.
some would say collusion,
two airlines were to say,
the route from LA to Chicago,"
the route from Chicago to DC,
or collusion instead of competition,
the importance of struggle
between branches of government,
the importance of conflict
among corporations,
between the public and the private.
are collaborating with industry
and the environment,
with the very corporations
the problems they are trying to solve.
decided to address a serious problem:
with national and local governments
multinational soda company.
than one million dollars,
of a months-long promotional campaign
and color scheme.
for its products.
for the intergovernmental agency,
to promote sustainable living.
of sugar-sweetened beverages
and drunk out of plastic bottles
grappling with obesity,
from a public health
one public health problem,
of dozens I discovered
between government and industry.
about the initiatives in parks
promoting exercise,
creating voluntary pledges
have become the paradigm in public health,
from the point of view of industry.
public health problems and their solutions
their commercial interests.
and lack of physical activity.
involving major corporations.
in strategies of influence
to which industry will not agree.
to increased regulation
stave off even more regulation
out of the market.
to do certain things,
of their unhealthy products,
competition law,
means reaching agreement with industry.
have been sold.
is building a well pad on your land.
of the Hallowich family.
of the noise, vibration
from the flaring of natural gas.
where this image appeared,
we discovered why they fell silent.
"What happened to the Hallowiches?"
had made a secret settlement
a take-it-or-leave-it settlement.
and start your lives again,
of your experience with our company,
experience with fracking,
by a medical examination.
the Hallowiches for accepting
to silence a squeaky wheel.
is the legal and regulatory system,
networks of agreements
and seal off data points
and epidemiologists,
from issuing a violation notice
bad from a public health point of view;
not because they are isolated examples.
of the public official
suicidal thoughts in adolescents.
who went after the food company
health benefits of its yogurt.
directed at both sides of the aisle
in the darkness,
we need to engage in conflict.
in direct conflict with corporations.
are inherently good
act to promote their commercial interests,
undermining or promoting the common good.
of governments
of our common good.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Jonathan Marks - Bioethicist, lawyerJonathan Marks works at the intersections of ethics, law and policy -- writing and speaking about torture, obesity, fracking, health care and other pressing issues of our time.
Why you should listen
After studying law at Oxford University, Jonathan Marks qualified as a barrister and mediator, and he spent a decade in full-time practice in London. He became an expert on human rights, working on cases about torture (the Pinochet case), the protection of privacy and personal data, and the regulation of food, drugs and the environment.
The Greenwall Fellowship in Bioethics and Health Policy at Johns Hopkins and Georgetown Universities led to his current appointment as Director of the Bioethics Program at Penn State University, where he is also affiliated with the Rock Ethics Institute, Penn State Law and the School of International Affairs. He remains an academic member of Matrix, a London barristers' chambers with offices in Geneva.
Marks is passionate about teaching and lecturing, as his TED talk, and an article in the New York Times both attest. The talk offers a preview of his book manuscript, The Perils of Partnership. It also draws on research he conducted during his six-year affiliation with the Edmond J. Safra Center for Ethics at Harvard and during residencies at the Hastings Center and at the Brocher Foundation in Geneva.
Learn more about Marks's ideas from several articles, essays, and op-eds here.
Jonathan Marks | Speaker | TED.com