E183: Why Corporate America Will Never De-Woke | Law Prof Explains

E183: Why Corporate America Will Never De-Woke | Law Prof Explains

In this episode, Jesse talks with Fordham University School of Law corporate-law professor Sean J. Griffith about why “go woke, go broke” hasn’t really played out—and why big, publicly traded firms can stay “woke” even when consumers or politicians claim there’s backlash. The core theme: modern corporate power often runs through managers, compliance systems, and financial intermediaries, not “owners,” and that structure changes what accountability looks like.

They unpack:

  • Managerialism and the separation of ownership from control in modern corporations (why founders can still get pushed out, and why shareholders often don’t steer day-to-day governance).
  • How “woke” agendas persist inside firms through HR/compliance, regulatory levers, and asset-manager/proxy-voting plumbing.
  • Why vague, non-falsifiable goals (DEI/ESG/sustainability) can become a perpetual project that reduces accountability and can substitute for clearer objectives like returns—or even employee compensation.
  • The politics of corporate speech and compelled trainings, including the Florida “Stop WOKE Act” litigation.
  • The “what now?” question: what reforms (especially around intermediaries and voting) might actually change corporate behavior.
Key ideas & quotable moments
  • “Woke doesn’t vanish; it rebrands.” Words change (DEI → “belonging,” ESG → “sustainability”), structures stay.
  • Modern corporate governance isn’t “owners calling the shots.” It’s boards, managers, compliance, and intermediaries.
  • Compliance departments can function as political “levers” inside firms—often not aligned with shareholder-return logic.
  • Passive funds concentrate voting power. People hold the economic exposure, but big fund complexes often hold the vote.
  • Vague goals reduce accountability. If you miss financial targets, point to ESG wins; if you miss ESG targets, point to financial realities.
Topics covered
  • “Woke capitalism” as organizational inertia, not just marketing
  • Managerialism and the separation of ownership/control
  • Board governance: fiduciary duty vs stakeholder goals
  • HR’s growth, compliance logic, and internal “mission” narratives
  • Regulation as governance-by-proxy (disclosure rules, compliance guidelines)
  • Passive index funds, voting power, and “engagement” with CEOs
  • Proxy advisers and how voting guidance can steer outcomes
  • Status incentives for executives (elite conferences, reputational capital)
  • The Florida workplace-training case and corporate First Amendment rights
  • AI and the possibility of “automating” bureaucracy (for better or worse)
  • Political strategy: targeting intermediaries vs hoping markets self-correct
Links & references mentioned

Sean’s article “Woke Will Never Go Broke” at Chronicles Magazine.

  • Sean’s faculty page at Fordham University School of Law.
  • Sean’s papers on SSRN (example paper page).
  • Business Roundtable “Statement on the Purpose of a Corporation” (2019).
  • Securities and Exchange Commission climate disclosure rule (press release).
  • Florida “Stop WOKE Act” workplace-training litigation (Eleventh Circuit case page).
  • The Economist: “How HR took over the world… Will AI shrink it?”
Guest bio

Sean J. Griffith is a corporate and securities law professor and director of the Fordham Corporate Law Center. His work focuses on corporate governance, securities regulation, and related questions of institutional power inside public companies.

About this episode

If you’ve ever wondered why “boycotts” don’t seem to change corporate behavior—or why the same internal programs persist no matter who wins elections—this episode is a deep dive into the

structure

of modern capitalism: boards, managers, compliance, regulators, and the intermediaries who often control how shares get voted.

🎙 The Pod is hosted by Jesse Wright
💬 For guest suggestions, questions, or media inquiries, reach out at https://elpodcast.media/
📬 Never miss an episode – subscribe and follow wherever you get your podcasts.
⭐️ If you enjoyed this episode, please rate and review the show. It helps others find us.

Thanks for listening!

Episoder(186)

E98: The Corruption of America's Food Industry: Austin Frerick Explains

E98: The Corruption of America's Food Industry: Austin Frerick Explains

Austin Frerick exposes the monopolistic grip on America’s food system and the consequences for quality, health, labor, and democracy in his new book Barons.Guest bio: Austin Frerick is a Yale Universi...

20 Sep 202458min

E97: Aging Populations & Their Global Consequences: Interview w/ Charles Goodhart

E97: Aging Populations & Their Global Consequences: Interview w/ Charles Goodhart

Renowned economist Charles Goodhart joins the podcast to explore how aging populations, falling birthrates, and shifting global labor dynamics are reshaping the future of economies, politics, and soci...

18 Sep 202454min

E96: Kamala's Rise to Power, Trump v Harris Debate, Media Bias w/ Caleb Maupin

E96: Kamala's Rise to Power, Trump v Harris Debate, Media Bias w/ Caleb Maupin

Journalist and political analyst Caleb Maupin discusses his controversial book Kamala Harris and the Future of America, censorship, and the political forces shaping the 2024 U.S. presidential election...

14 Sep 20241h 12min

E95: Breaking Judge Explains Raygun’s Olympic Performance - w/ Kev "DJ Renegade' Gopie

E95: Breaking Judge Explains Raygun’s Olympic Performance - w/ Kev "DJ Renegade' Gopie

DJ Renegade, co-creator of the Olympic breaking judging system, explains how breakdancing entered the 2024 Paris Olympics and addresses the controversy surrounding competitor B-Girl Ray Gun.Guest Bio:...

7 Sep 202440min

E94: LIES My Liberal Teachers Taught Me - w/ Wilfred Reilly

E94: LIES My Liberal Teachers Taught Me - w/ Wilfred Reilly

Dr. Wilfred Reilly joins the show to discuss his latest book Lies My Liberal Teacher Told Me, challenging dominant narratives in education, race, gender, and American history.Guest Bio: Dr. Wilfred Re...

5 Sep 20241h 10min

E93: Exploring Venture Capital & Surveillance Capitalism w/ Rob Lalka

E93: Exploring Venture Capital & Surveillance Capitalism w/ Rob Lalka

Rob Lalka, Tulane professor and author of The Venture Alchemist, explores how big tech used venture capital and surveillance to convert profits into political and societal power.Guest Bio: Rob Lalka i...

24 Aug 20241h 1min

E92: Inside the Invisible Cage: How Algorithms Control Workers w/ Hatim Rahman

E92: Inside the Invisible Cage: How Algorithms Control Workers w/ Hatim Rahman

Award-winning professor Hatim A. Rahman joins the podcast to discuss Inside the Invisible Cage, exploring how algorithms and AI shape modern work, from gig platforms to corporate offices.Guest Bio: Dr...

19 Aug 202459min

E91: Unpacking Google’s Monopoly Case w/ Harvard Professor Shane Greenstein

E91: Unpacking Google’s Monopoly Case w/ Harvard Professor Shane Greenstein

Harvard’s Shane Greenstein breaks down the Google antitrust ruling, the future of search, and why the biggest tech companies may be due for a reckoning.👤 Guest Bio: Shane Greenstein is the Martin Mar...

16 Aug 202442min

Populært innen Business og økonomi

stopp-verden
dine-penger-pengeradet
lydartikler-fra-aftenposten
e24-podden
rss-penger-polser-og-politikk
rss-borsmorgen-okonominyhetene
utbytte
pengepodden-2
finansredaksjonen
pengesnakk
morgenkaffen-med-finansavisen
tid-er-penger-en-podcast-med-peter-warren
rss-sunn-okonomi
livet-pa-veien-med-jan-erik-larssen
okonomiamatorene
liberal-halvtime
lederpodden
rss-markedspuls-2
rss-impressions-2
rss-investering-gjort-enkelt