In response to the paradigm shift from territorial corporations to global businesses and supply chains, States are increasingly engaging in regulating extraterritorial business activities, supply chain disclosure regulation being a primary example. Much ink has thus far spilled on the intrinsic doctrinal and conceptual aspects of this regulatory approach, with its interactions to the external regulatory and institutional environment explored far less to date. This article seeks to correct the scholarly imbalance by critically examining how s.54 of the UK Modern Slavery Act (MSA) – a prominent attempt among state-level initiatives designed to promote human rights protection within global supply chains – fits with other extraterritorial initi...
The UK Modern Slavery Act aims to reduce and eradicate various forms of exploitation and is in this ...
On 29th October 2015, the Transparency in Supply Chains Provision (TISC, s.54) came into force. The ...
In the last ten or so years a ‘new kid on the block’ has arrived on the Business and Human Rights sc...
In response to the paradigm shift from territorial corporations to global businesses and supply chai...
The home states of multinational enterprises have in recent years sought to use publi...
The Modern Slavery Act 2015 contains an application of enterprise principles in its transparency in ...
On 29 August 2016, in a claim by Pakistani survivors and legal heirs against German retailer KiK for...
Despite slavery being criminalised globally, modern slavery is widespread, affecting nearly every co...
The global economy relies on corporate sourcing and procurement practices along complex transnationa...
This study provides a linguistic analysis of three modern slavery disclosure regulations, the Califo...
Globalisation has created a complex network of markets, in which multi-national corporations are abl...
Global supply chains present major challenges for company law and corporate governance, nationally a...
The UK Modern Slavery Act 2015 (hereinafter ‘MSA’) primarily aims to establish a comprehensive legal...
'For the English to see' or effective change?-How supply chains are shaped by laws and regulations a...
Over the last decade, the norm of corporate accountability for labour standards in global supply ch...
The UK Modern Slavery Act aims to reduce and eradicate various forms of exploitation and is in this ...
On 29th October 2015, the Transparency in Supply Chains Provision (TISC, s.54) came into force. The ...
In the last ten or so years a ‘new kid on the block’ has arrived on the Business and Human Rights sc...
In response to the paradigm shift from territorial corporations to global businesses and supply chai...
The home states of multinational enterprises have in recent years sought to use publi...
The Modern Slavery Act 2015 contains an application of enterprise principles in its transparency in ...
On 29 August 2016, in a claim by Pakistani survivors and legal heirs against German retailer KiK for...
Despite slavery being criminalised globally, modern slavery is widespread, affecting nearly every co...
The global economy relies on corporate sourcing and procurement practices along complex transnationa...
This study provides a linguistic analysis of three modern slavery disclosure regulations, the Califo...
Globalisation has created a complex network of markets, in which multi-national corporations are abl...
Global supply chains present major challenges for company law and corporate governance, nationally a...
The UK Modern Slavery Act 2015 (hereinafter ‘MSA’) primarily aims to establish a comprehensive legal...
'For the English to see' or effective change?-How supply chains are shaped by laws and regulations a...
Over the last decade, the norm of corporate accountability for labour standards in global supply ch...
The UK Modern Slavery Act aims to reduce and eradicate various forms of exploitation and is in this ...
On 29th October 2015, the Transparency in Supply Chains Provision (TISC, s.54) came into force. The ...
In the last ten or so years a ‘new kid on the block’ has arrived on the Business and Human Rights sc...