Home state reluctance to engage in the regulation of international corporate activities in the human rights context is sometimes expressed as a concern that it would constitute an imperialistic infringement of host state sovereignty. This concern may be explicit, or it may be implicit in an expressed desire to avoid conflict with the sovereignty of foreign states. Yet, in the absence of a multilateral treaty directly addressing business and human rights, a role for home states in regulating so as to prevent and remedy human rights harms is increasingly being suggested. The purpose of this paper is to explore theoretical perspectives that lend support to unilateral home state regulation. Having established that unilateral home state regulati...
Whether the European home states of transnational corporations (TNCs) are responsible for the TNCs’ ...
The Special Representative to the UN Secretary-General on Business and Human Rights (SRSG) has ident...
Many states, or rather their leaders and officials, routinely violate the fundamental human rights o...
Home state reluctance to regulate international corporate activities in the human rights context is ...
Scholars have suggested that ‘home’ states of transnational corporations (TNCs) have a legal duty to...
The regulation of home country to govern business and human rights has been commonly debated. It is ...
This thesis addresses the role of home states in relation to extraterritorial human rights violation...
Home states that are actively engaged in global mining have considered and rejected calls to regulat...
From an international political theory perspective, this paper assesses the justifiability of ascrib...
This article evaluates two key extraterritorial techniques to bring human rights standards to bear o...
The research question of this thesis is if and to what extent international does international law a...
This inquiry explores the tension between state sovereignty and universal human rights. Research is...
This article accounts for recent developments in corporate social responsibility, international trad...
This thesis evaluates two key extraterritorial techniques to bring human rights standards to bear on...
International law was traditionally a horizontal and state-centric system of rules. Although state-c...
Whether the European home states of transnational corporations (TNCs) are responsible for the TNCs’ ...
The Special Representative to the UN Secretary-General on Business and Human Rights (SRSG) has ident...
Many states, or rather their leaders and officials, routinely violate the fundamental human rights o...
Home state reluctance to regulate international corporate activities in the human rights context is ...
Scholars have suggested that ‘home’ states of transnational corporations (TNCs) have a legal duty to...
The regulation of home country to govern business and human rights has been commonly debated. It is ...
This thesis addresses the role of home states in relation to extraterritorial human rights violation...
Home states that are actively engaged in global mining have considered and rejected calls to regulat...
From an international political theory perspective, this paper assesses the justifiability of ascrib...
This article evaluates two key extraterritorial techniques to bring human rights standards to bear o...
The research question of this thesis is if and to what extent international does international law a...
This inquiry explores the tension between state sovereignty and universal human rights. Research is...
This article accounts for recent developments in corporate social responsibility, international trad...
This thesis evaluates two key extraterritorial techniques to bring human rights standards to bear on...
International law was traditionally a horizontal and state-centric system of rules. Although state-c...
Whether the European home states of transnational corporations (TNCs) are responsible for the TNCs’ ...
The Special Representative to the UN Secretary-General on Business and Human Rights (SRSG) has ident...
Many states, or rather their leaders and officials, routinely violate the fundamental human rights o...