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High Justice

High Justice is a 1974 collection of science fiction short stories by American writer Jerry Pournelle. It was republished in an omnibus edition with Exiles to Glory in 2009 as Exile—and Glory. In the stories, Earth's civilization is about to collapse under the weight of its bureaucracies and political corruption, but a new spacefaring civilization is being built by determined, technologically-sophisticated multinational corporations. Each short story concerns itself with the problems facing large technological tasks in the near future. The protagonists are the agents of multinational corporations—engineers engaged in large scale projects and fixers who protect company interests and troubleshoot problems.

A major part of the background of these stories is the final fall of the Welfare States; Russia is never mentioned, and the US is downsliding due to inflation and political corruption. The stories were published between 1972 and 1975, and reflect Pournelle's concerns with the effects of environmentalism, welfare states, and high taxes on the ability of people to make advances in technology. At that time the Great Society, America's version of the Welfare State, was not even 10 years old.

Each short story concerns itself with the problems facing large technological tasks in the near future. These include plutonium fuel breeding, deep sea thermal power, large scale food cultivation and access to fresh water. The protagonists are the agents of multinational corporations—engineers engaged in large scale projects and fixers who protect company interests and troubleshoot problems. Though economic competitors are mentioned in passing, the primary antagonists are political—untrustworthy governments and covert operatives acting on their behalf.

Pournelle's view of corporate mega-projects is similar to that of Robert A. Heinlein as expressed in stories such as The Man Who Sold the Moon, or in the work of Tom Clancy. Top executives concentrate on financial risk, while highly competent engineers on the ground handle logistics. Incompetent engineers get fired. There are no meddling vice presidents, craven middle managers or "deadwood" bureaucracy that is generally found in any large technical effort—mostly because Pournelle's corporations lack trade unions.

The projects described in these stories reflect technologies described in Pournelle's non-fiction collection, "A Step Farther Out":

The short novel Exiles to Glory is a sequel, featuring two characters from these stories. Another short novel, Birth of Fire, is considered by the author to also be part of this universe, and has similar themes, though it draws more from the author's military SF. Pournelle also had plans to add a story he called "Lisabetta" to this series.

The stories are part of Pournelle's CoDominium universe, a future history stretching to the early 31st century. The themes of decay in the rich democracies are the same. The technology excludes innovations like the Langston field and the Alderson drive, which are the main driving forces in the human diaspora projected for the 21st century. The publisher makes the claim that these are the stories that "started it all", but Pournelle himself considers it a separate "no FTL" universe.

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