This article evaluates two key extraterritorial techniques to bring human rights standards to bear on corporate misconduct, and does so through an analysis of the jurisdictional dilemma they raise. The background to the article is the difficulty of imposing human rights standards on transnational business operating in ‘host’ countries where, for various reasons, such standards are not implemented locally, resulting in governance gaps. Civil litigation in the company’s ‘home’ state and ‘long arm’ regulation emanating from the home state are important alternative methods of establishing and enforcing human rights standards, but they engender controversy both in terms of their legitimacy under public international law and because there are a n...
Economic globalization has created a governance gap, often leaving powerful corporations largely unr...
As transnational corporations have emerged as some of the most prominent actors within the internati...
The article addresses the vexing problem of holding corporations liable for assisting in the soverei...
This thesis evaluates two key extraterritorial techniques to bring human rights standards to bear on...
The United Nations Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights, resulting from the work of John ...
The United Nations Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights, resulting from the work of John ...
All companies, regardless of the sector they belong to, can positively or negatively impact human ri...
This article examines the feasibility of using the jurisdiction by necessity doctrine to promote the...
The research question of this thesis is if and to what extent international does international law a...
With a decision based upon the consideration that all the significant conduct occurred outside the t...
The regulation of home country to govern business and human rights has been commonly debated. It is ...
Scholars have suggested that ‘home’ states of transnational corporations (TNCs) have a legal duty to...
A notable development of recent years has been the simultaneous legal invisibility and ubiquity of t...
The obligation to protect individuals against human rights abuses by private and other ‘third’ parti...
This article explores whether transnational corporations or their executives can be held criminally ...
Economic globalization has created a governance gap, often leaving powerful corporations largely unr...
As transnational corporations have emerged as some of the most prominent actors within the internati...
The article addresses the vexing problem of holding corporations liable for assisting in the soverei...
This thesis evaluates two key extraterritorial techniques to bring human rights standards to bear on...
The United Nations Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights, resulting from the work of John ...
The United Nations Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights, resulting from the work of John ...
All companies, regardless of the sector they belong to, can positively or negatively impact human ri...
This article examines the feasibility of using the jurisdiction by necessity doctrine to promote the...
The research question of this thesis is if and to what extent international does international law a...
With a decision based upon the consideration that all the significant conduct occurred outside the t...
The regulation of home country to govern business and human rights has been commonly debated. It is ...
Scholars have suggested that ‘home’ states of transnational corporations (TNCs) have a legal duty to...
A notable development of recent years has been the simultaneous legal invisibility and ubiquity of t...
The obligation to protect individuals against human rights abuses by private and other ‘third’ parti...
This article explores whether transnational corporations or their executives can be held criminally ...
Economic globalization has created a governance gap, often leaving powerful corporations largely unr...
As transnational corporations have emerged as some of the most prominent actors within the internati...
The article addresses the vexing problem of holding corporations liable for assisting in the soverei...