From Corporate Social Responsibility to Corporate Social Liability: A Socio-Legal Study of Corporate Liability in Global Value Chains
Autor Anna Aseevaen Limba Engleză Paperback – 14 dec 2022
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781509949144
ISBN-10: 1509949143
Pagini: 304
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.38 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Hart Publishing
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1509949143
Pagini: 304
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.38 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Hart Publishing
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
Offers a socialised account of corporate liability for supply chains by introducing both a normative and behavioural perspective
Notă biografică
Anna Aseeva is Assistant Professor at the Faculty of Law and Administration at Lazarski University, Warsaw, Poland.
Cuprins
PART ION THE LIMITS OF LAW AND A LIMITLESS GLOBALISED MARKET1. IntroductionI. Meet Corporate Social Liability II. Why Corporate Social Liability? III. What does Corporate Social Liability Cover? IV. The Book's Approach and Methods V. Structure of the Book 2. Setting the Stage: Corporate Responsibility in Context I. The Corporate Responsibility Debate in its Historical Context II. Ideational Context: The Impact of the Washington Consensus III. Economic Context: Centre, Semi-Periphery and Periphery of Global Value Chains IV. Organisational Context: Global Value Chain Governance V. Social Context: CSR Standards for and within Global Value Chains VI. The Advent of International Standards VII. The Many Shades of Voluntary Standards and Corporate Self-Regulation VIII. The Rise and Fall of CSR PART IITHE SHORTCOMINGS OF CORPORATE RESPONSIBILITY AND OBSTACLES TO CORPORATE LIABILITY3. National Law: Shades of Publicness in Private Regulation I. Corporate Law II. Tort Law and Contract Law III. Commercial Law 4. Post-national Law: Mandatory Disclosure, Environmental and Human Rights Due Diligence, and Supply Chain Liability I. Supranational Law II. International Law PART IIICORPORATE LIABILITY IN THEORY AND PRACTICE: RECENT APPROACHES AND AN INTRODUCTIONTO CORPORATE SOCIAL LIABILITY5. Corporate Liability in International Comparison 9I. Legislative Landscape II. Litigation Landscape 6. Analysis of Avenues for Corporate Social Liability in Global Value Chains I. Common Criteria for Founding Liability: An Overview II. Further Criteria for Founding Liability: Various Relevant Practices III. Conceptual Prospects for Corporate Social Liability in Global Value Chains PART IVPITFALLS AND THE FUTURE OF CORPORATE SOCIAL LIABILITY IN GLOBAL VALUE CHAINS7. Liability through Judicialisation, Legalisation, and Alternative Dispute Settlement I. General Direct Liability II. A(n) (Im)Possibility of Judicial Assertiveness: A General Duty of Care for Global Value Chains III. Legalisation through Legislation: Liability Disciplines in Current French and Dutch Law IV. Transnational CSL Legalisation: Bangladesh Accord and Bangladesh Alliance V. Alternative Dispute Resolution through International Investment Arbitration VI. Enforcing Corporate Social Liability ex ante 8. The Reality and Prospects of European and International Law of Corporate Liability in Global Value Chains I. European Law II. International Business and Human Rights Framework: Guiding or Binding the Global Business? 9. On the Gap-filling Corporate Social Liability (and its Gaps) I. The Pitfalls of International Arbitration for Realising Transnational CSL II. The Limits and Opportunities of the Interface of Domestic Private Law with Public International Law III. Whither Corporate Social Liability? Conclusion: Where Do We Stand and Is There a Way Forward? I. Where Do We Stand? 3II. The Way Forward III. Final Concluding Remarks
Recenzii
A thought-provoking book . Beyond its legal reach, the book, written in the midst of an unprecedented public health and socio-economic crisis, provides a perceptive account of our society's dominant values and contributes to paving the way towards a mindful and sustainable recovery from the pandemic.
This book is a sophisticated addition to what Socio-Legal Studies has to offer to the formulation of legal policy towards the harmful effects of TNCs. It very interestingly suggests the gains in theory and policy that may be made from giving GSCs, so far largely a feature of business literature, such prominence in legal discussion.
This book is a very welcome contribution to business and human rights and one which scholars and practitioners in the field will no doubt find useful. The book provides us with an impressive and critical survey of legal tools already available to combat corporate irresponsibility, as well as the social and historical context through which GVCs emerged.
This is an important book. Anna Aseeva's study of corporate social liability brings together comparative legal scholarship with a socio-legal assessment of the ways in which corporate responsibility for societal issues is regulated across global value chains. She demonstrates that we, as lawyers, can influence corporations' behaviour if we look beyond legal liability and acknowledge the ex ante effects of norms.
Aseeva deftly examines the shortcomings of existing soft and hard law for preventing and addressing environmental, human rights and other social harms of business conducted through GVCs and puts forward innovative ideas for filling these governance gaps. Her book is an important contribution to the literature on corporate accountability and should be required reading for Business and Human Rights scholars and students, as well as legislators concerned with the excesses of global capitalism and corporate impunity.
This book is a sophisticated addition to what Socio-Legal Studies has to offer to the formulation of legal policy towards the harmful effects of TNCs. It very interestingly suggests the gains in theory and policy that may be made from giving GSCs, so far largely a feature of business literature, such prominence in legal discussion.
This book is a very welcome contribution to business and human rights and one which scholars and practitioners in the field will no doubt find useful. The book provides us with an impressive and critical survey of legal tools already available to combat corporate irresponsibility, as well as the social and historical context through which GVCs emerged.
This is an important book. Anna Aseeva's study of corporate social liability brings together comparative legal scholarship with a socio-legal assessment of the ways in which corporate responsibility for societal issues is regulated across global value chains. She demonstrates that we, as lawyers, can influence corporations' behaviour if we look beyond legal liability and acknowledge the ex ante effects of norms.
Aseeva deftly examines the shortcomings of existing soft and hard law for preventing and addressing environmental, human rights and other social harms of business conducted through GVCs and puts forward innovative ideas for filling these governance gaps. Her book is an important contribution to the literature on corporate accountability and should be required reading for Business and Human Rights scholars and students, as well as legislators concerned with the excesses of global capitalism and corporate impunity.