This article uses snapshots, rather than the ongoing flows of diffusion/contestation typically emphasized by constructivists, to explore the exercise of power through normative change. Its case is a high-profile Human Rights Council initiative: the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights (UNGP s). These UNGP s have successfully presented meanings as fixed while actually stretching those meanings’ boundaries. They reconceptualize what it means to “respect” and “protect” human rights. This is surprising given that the principles were framed as a conservative exercise at clarification, and under-noticed due to the legal rather than conceptual focus of the existing critical literature. To respect human rights, according to the UNGP s...
This post was contributed by Richard Howitt MEP, European Parliament Rapporteur on Corporate Social ...
The issue of corporate responsibilities has had a tumultuous history at the United Nations. When the...
While transnational corporations and other business enterprises have the capacity to foster economi...
The world’s understanding of the action needed to advance human rights is deeply structured by the ‘...
Since the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights (UNGPs) were adopted by the UN Human Ri...
Once upon a time, and for a very short time, there was something that people in authority, and those...
The advent of contemporary economic globalization has substantially altered the regulatory environme...
On 11 June 2011, the United Nations Human Rights Council endorsed the ‘Guiding Principles for Busine...
Global Corporate Social Responsibility schemes have assumed an authoritative role in today’s diversi...
Purpose – Drawing on Fairclough (1989, 2005), the purpose of this paper is to explore how respect f...
There have been several initiatives, since the 1970s, trying to provide an international policy resp...
The advent of contemporary economic globalization has substantially altered the regulatory environme...
This chapter is a commentary on Principle 2 of the United Nations Guiding Principles on Business and...
This dissertation examines the ongoing problem of business actors violating human rights and the reg...
This blog was contributed by Sara Seck, Associate Professor, Western Law, & Senior Fellow, Internati...
This post was contributed by Richard Howitt MEP, European Parliament Rapporteur on Corporate Social ...
The issue of corporate responsibilities has had a tumultuous history at the United Nations. When the...
While transnational corporations and other business enterprises have the capacity to foster economi...
The world’s understanding of the action needed to advance human rights is deeply structured by the ‘...
Since the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights (UNGPs) were adopted by the UN Human Ri...
Once upon a time, and for a very short time, there was something that people in authority, and those...
The advent of contemporary economic globalization has substantially altered the regulatory environme...
On 11 June 2011, the United Nations Human Rights Council endorsed the ‘Guiding Principles for Busine...
Global Corporate Social Responsibility schemes have assumed an authoritative role in today’s diversi...
Purpose – Drawing on Fairclough (1989, 2005), the purpose of this paper is to explore how respect f...
There have been several initiatives, since the 1970s, trying to provide an international policy resp...
The advent of contemporary economic globalization has substantially altered the regulatory environme...
This chapter is a commentary on Principle 2 of the United Nations Guiding Principles on Business and...
This dissertation examines the ongoing problem of business actors violating human rights and the reg...
This blog was contributed by Sara Seck, Associate Professor, Western Law, & Senior Fellow, Internati...
This post was contributed by Richard Howitt MEP, European Parliament Rapporteur on Corporate Social ...
The issue of corporate responsibilities has had a tumultuous history at the United Nations. When the...
While transnational corporations and other business enterprises have the capacity to foster economi...