<P>In this book, Sidney Dekker sets out to identify the market mechanisms that explain how less government paradoxically leads to greater compliance burdens. This book gives shape and substance to a suspicion that has become widespread among workers in almost every industry: we have to follow more rules than ever¿and still, things can go spectacularly wrong.</P><P>Much has been privatized and deregulated, giving us what is sometimes known as ¿new public management,¿ driven by neoliberal, market-favoring policies. But, paradoxically, we typically have more rules today, not fewer. It¿s not the government: it¿s us. This book is the first of a three-part series on the effects of ¿neoliberalism,¿ which promotes the role of the private sector in the economy. <I>Compliance Capitalism </I>examines what aspects of the compliance economy, what mechanisms of bureaucratization, are directly linked to us having given free markets a greater reign over our political economy. The book steps through th