Foreword: From economic support of dictatorship to it’s not 30 pesos, it is 30 years
Juan Méndez
Chapter 1: Complicity in context: It’s the economy, stupid!
Juan Pablo Bohoslavsky
Section 1: Economic Complicity – Past and Present
Chapter 2: The belated centrality of the economic dimension in transitional justice
Naomi Roht-Arriaza
Chapter 3: Foreign economic assistance and respect for civil and political rights: Chile – a case study
Antonio Cassese
Chapter 4: Cassese’s great contributions and unresolved complaints
Karinna Fernández and Sebastián Smart
Chapter 5: Contextualizing the Cassese Report: The dictatorship that changed the United Nations human rights system and its legacy in monitoring economic, social and cultural rights
Elvira Domínguez Redondo and Magdalena Sepúlveda Carmona
Chapter 6:Transitional justice and economic actors: Latin America’s protagonism
Leigh A. Payne, Gabriel Pereira and Laura Bernal-Bermudez
Section 2: ‘Pinochet ́s Economy’
Chapter 7: The Chilean economic model and its subordinate democracy
José Miguel Ahumada and Andrés Solimano
Chapter 8: Unraveling the financial assistance to the Pinochet’s regime
Juan Pablo Bohoslavsky and Mariana Rulli
Chapter 9: Extractivism as a policy: From its dictatorial origins to its democratic
continuity
Sebastián Smart
Chapter 10: Promoting and ensuring inequality: the distributive consequences of the dictatorship
Javier Rodríguez Weber
Chapter 11: Experts and intellectual complicity in the Chilean dictatorship
Marcos González Hernando y Tomás Undurraga
Section 3: A Game of Support, Corruption and Material Benefits
Chapter 12: The support of the Chambers of Commerce to the dictatorship
Rodrigo Araya Gómez
Chapter 13: The media during the dictatorship: between economic benefits and journalistic complicity
Carla Moscoso
Chapter 14: A cat with no bell. The privatization of the Chilean pension system during Pinochet’s dictatorship
Mariana Rulli
Chapter 15: Privatization and repression: Two sides of the same coin
Sebastián Smart
Section 4: Repressive rules and procedures for corporations
Chapter 16: Union law: Anti-unionism as a neoliberal victory
Daniela Marzi
Chapter 17: “The employers do what they want with us:” Unions and workers under the Pinochet dictatorship
Ángela Vergara and Peter Winn
Chapter 18: The Dismantling of the welfare State and mass imprisonment in Chile
Silvio Cuneo Nash
Chapter 19: Pinochet’s repressive urbanism: the violent neoliberalisation of space in Santiago
Francisco Vergara Perucich
Chapter 20: Autonomy in times of economic complicity: mining expansion and water practices in northern Chile.
Cristián Olmos Herrera
Chapter 21: Corporate complicity in human rights violations in Chile: The case of forestry companies and the Mapuche people
José Aylwin
Section 5: Case Studies
Chapter 22: Pesquera Arauco and Colonia Dignidad cases
Karinna Fernández Neira and Magdalena Garcés Fuentes
Chapter 23: The Edwards: the power of a newspaper
Nancy Guzmán
Section 6: Legal elements of economic complicity
Chapter 24: Corporate responsibility for complicity in international and comparative law
Juan Pablo Bohoslavsky
Chapter 25: Economic complicity under Chilean law
Pietro Sferrazza Taibi and Francisco Bustos Bustos
Section 7: Conclusions and prospects
Chapter 26: Present-day Chile: Genealogy of a business paradise
Julio Pinto Vallejos
About the Contributors