Business enterprises have to report their activities to stakeholders in order to provide corporate transparency. Non-financial corporate reports provide a comprehensive coverage of environmental, socio-economic, labor, health, and human rights issues. In the paper the author argues that a uniform definition of a sector-specific human rights issue in reporting frameworks, rather than self-identification by enterprises of salient human rights issues, would help to achieve standardization and thus the possibility of sanctions in the event of false or misleading reporting. The author analyzes existing international and regional non-financial reporting instruments regarding the human rights included in it. The main content issues of non-financia...
The UN Framework on Human Rights and Business comprises the State’s duty to protect human rights, th...
This paper investigates the influence of formal institutions, in particular legislation,on corporate...
The United Nations (UN) Human Rights Council’s Protect, Respect and Remedy (‘Three Pillar’) Framewor...
The increasing use of indicators in global governance facilitates transforming complex phenomenon in...
Corporate responsibilities with regard to human rights have long time been in the grey zone, but the...
This research explored the extent and quality of human rights disclosure in Fortune top 100 corporat...
This article analyses the EU Non-Financial Reporting Directive (2014/95) and argues that, while non-...
Domestic regulation of company statements has significance to the increasing obligations on business...
This paper investigates the human rights performance reporting practices of the top 50 Australian fi...
PurposeThe purpose of this paper is to discuss a wide range of significant developments that have em...
This chapter focuses on the development of corporate human rights standards since the United Nations...
We test the assumption as to whether financial and nonfinancial reporting by multinational corporati...
This article begins with a discussion of why one should be concerned or at least interested in the h...
The UN Framework on Human Rights and Business comprises the State’s duty to protect human rights, th...
This paper investigates the influence of formal institutions, in particular legislation,on corporate...
The United Nations (UN) Human Rights Council’s Protect, Respect and Remedy (‘Three Pillar’) Framewor...
The increasing use of indicators in global governance facilitates transforming complex phenomenon in...
Corporate responsibilities with regard to human rights have long time been in the grey zone, but the...
This research explored the extent and quality of human rights disclosure in Fortune top 100 corporat...
This article analyses the EU Non-Financial Reporting Directive (2014/95) and argues that, while non-...
Domestic regulation of company statements has significance to the increasing obligations on business...
This paper investigates the human rights performance reporting practices of the top 50 Australian fi...
PurposeThe purpose of this paper is to discuss a wide range of significant developments that have em...
This chapter focuses on the development of corporate human rights standards since the United Nations...
We test the assumption as to whether financial and nonfinancial reporting by multinational corporati...
This article begins with a discussion of why one should be concerned or at least interested in the h...
The UN Framework on Human Rights and Business comprises the State’s duty to protect human rights, th...
This paper investigates the influence of formal institutions, in particular legislation,on corporate...
The United Nations (UN) Human Rights Council’s Protect, Respect and Remedy (‘Three Pillar’) Framewor...