Human Rights and Business: A Policy-Oriented Perspective: Studies in Intercultural Human Rights, cartea 6
Autor Denise Wallaceen Limba Engleză Hardback – 27 noi 2014
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9789004279865
ISBN-10: 9004279865
Pagini: 410
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 x 36 mm
Greutate: 1.04 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill | Nijhoff
Seria Studies in Intercultural Human Rights
ISBN-10: 9004279865
Pagini: 410
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 x 36 mm
Greutate: 1.04 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill | Nijhoff
Seria Studies in Intercultural Human Rights
Cuprins
Excerpt of table of contents:
Abstract; Acknowledgments; Abbreviations
CHAPTER 1 The New Haven School and the Human Rights and Business Debate
I. Why the New Haven School?
A. What is Law?
B. Criticisms of the New Haven School
II. The Challenges in Applying the New Haven School to the Human Rights and Business Debate
III. What is International Law?
IV. Conclusion
CHAPTER 2 Delimitation of the Problem
I. Tools of the Trade
A. Clarification of Observational Standpoint
B. The Observational Standpoint of Key Decision Makers (Problem Solvers) in The Human Rights and Business Debate
II. Delimitation of the Problem Under a Policy-Oriented Jurisprudence Analysis
III. Geopolitical Drivers in the Human Rights and Business Debate
A. Transnational Corporations: Searching for New Markets – A Geopolitical Strategy
B. The Politics of Lebransraum and the Emergence of Transnational Corporations
IV. A Historical Overview of Corporations
A. Judicial Activism Eviscerates Constitutional Law: The Santa Clara Decision
V. The Business of Business: Corporate Social Responsibility and Human Rights
A. Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR): Definitions
B. Arguments for and against CSR
CHAPTER 3 Identifying Participants in the Human Rights and Business Debate
I. Who are the Participants?
A. Categorizing the Participants
B. The Westphalian Nation State: Has it Outlived its Purpose?
C. The Role of Corporations in the International Legal Order
II. The Participants’ Competing and Conflicting Claims
A. Claims of Individuals, Indigenous Peoples and Other Vulnerable Groups
B. Claims of Transnational Corporations
C. Claims of Nation-States
D. Claims of Nongovernmental Organizations and Civil Society
E. Claims of Decision Makers
F. The Participants’ Perspectives on International Legal Personality
G. Claims that TNCs are not Subjects of International Law
III. Perspectives of the Participants
A. Perspectives of the Victims: Individual/Indigenous Peoples and Other Vulnerable Groups B. Perspectives of the Prepertrators: TNCs
C. Perspectives of the Nation-States
D. Perspectives of NGOs and Civil Socity Organizations
E. Perspectives of David Weissbrodt and John RUggie, as the SRSG
IV. Common Assumptions of the Participants
V. Participants’ Bases of Power
VI. Strategies and Outcomes
CHAPTER 4 Past Trends in Decision
I. Trend Analysis – International
A. The Anti-Slavery and Abolition Movement
B. The Nuremberg Trials and the Liability of Corporations
II. Trend Analysis – The United Nations Attempts to Regulate TNCs
A. UN Draft Code of Conduct
B. The Global Compact
C. The UN Norms
D. The Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights: Implementing the United Nations Protect, Respect and Remedy Framework
III. Trend Analysis -- Intergovernmental Organizations’ Guidance to TNCs
IV. Trend Analysis -- United States Domestic Laws
V. Trend Analysis – Other Nations Laws and Regulations
VI. Trend Analysis – Voluntary Codes of Conduct
CHAPTER 5 Projecting Future Trends
I. The Future of the Alien Tort Claims Act
II. The Future of the Norms and the Guiding Principles
CHAPTER 6 Appraisal, Alternatives and Recommendations
I. Appraisal
A. Voluntary vs. Mandatory Regulations
B. The Anti-Corporation and Anti-Globalization Movements Fail to Address How to Resolve the Business and Human Rights Debate
II. Alternatives
A. International Tribunals
B. A World Court of Human Rights
C. International Commercial Court
D. A World Transnational Corporation Regulatory Authority
E. The Charter Revocation Movement
F. Code of Corporate Citizenship
G. Corporate Accountability
III. Recommendations
CHAPTER 7 Conclusion
Index.
Abstract; Acknowledgments; Abbreviations
CHAPTER 1 The New Haven School and the Human Rights and Business Debate
I. Why the New Haven School?
A. What is Law?
B. Criticisms of the New Haven School
II. The Challenges in Applying the New Haven School to the Human Rights and Business Debate
III. What is International Law?
IV. Conclusion
CHAPTER 2 Delimitation of the Problem
I. Tools of the Trade
A. Clarification of Observational Standpoint
B. The Observational Standpoint of Key Decision Makers (Problem Solvers) in The Human Rights and Business Debate
II. Delimitation of the Problem Under a Policy-Oriented Jurisprudence Analysis
III. Geopolitical Drivers in the Human Rights and Business Debate
A. Transnational Corporations: Searching for New Markets – A Geopolitical Strategy
B. The Politics of Lebransraum and the Emergence of Transnational Corporations
IV. A Historical Overview of Corporations
A. Judicial Activism Eviscerates Constitutional Law: The Santa Clara Decision
V. The Business of Business: Corporate Social Responsibility and Human Rights
A. Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR): Definitions
B. Arguments for and against CSR
CHAPTER 3 Identifying Participants in the Human Rights and Business Debate
I. Who are the Participants?
A. Categorizing the Participants
B. The Westphalian Nation State: Has it Outlived its Purpose?
C. The Role of Corporations in the International Legal Order
II. The Participants’ Competing and Conflicting Claims
A. Claims of Individuals, Indigenous Peoples and Other Vulnerable Groups
B. Claims of Transnational Corporations
C. Claims of Nation-States
D. Claims of Nongovernmental Organizations and Civil Society
E. Claims of Decision Makers
F. The Participants’ Perspectives on International Legal Personality
G. Claims that TNCs are not Subjects of International Law
III. Perspectives of the Participants
A. Perspectives of the Victims: Individual/Indigenous Peoples and Other Vulnerable Groups B. Perspectives of the Prepertrators: TNCs
C. Perspectives of the Nation-States
D. Perspectives of NGOs and Civil Socity Organizations
E. Perspectives of David Weissbrodt and John RUggie, as the SRSG
IV. Common Assumptions of the Participants
V. Participants’ Bases of Power
VI. Strategies and Outcomes
CHAPTER 4 Past Trends in Decision
I. Trend Analysis – International
A. The Anti-Slavery and Abolition Movement
B. The Nuremberg Trials and the Liability of Corporations
II. Trend Analysis – The United Nations Attempts to Regulate TNCs
A. UN Draft Code of Conduct
B. The Global Compact
C. The UN Norms
D. The Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights: Implementing the United Nations Protect, Respect and Remedy Framework
III. Trend Analysis -- Intergovernmental Organizations’ Guidance to TNCs
IV. Trend Analysis -- United States Domestic Laws
V. Trend Analysis – Other Nations Laws and Regulations
VI. Trend Analysis – Voluntary Codes of Conduct
CHAPTER 5 Projecting Future Trends
I. The Future of the Alien Tort Claims Act
II. The Future of the Norms and the Guiding Principles
CHAPTER 6 Appraisal, Alternatives and Recommendations
I. Appraisal
A. Voluntary vs. Mandatory Regulations
B. The Anti-Corporation and Anti-Globalization Movements Fail to Address How to Resolve the Business and Human Rights Debate
II. Alternatives
A. International Tribunals
B. A World Court of Human Rights
C. International Commercial Court
D. A World Transnational Corporation Regulatory Authority
E. The Charter Revocation Movement
F. Code of Corporate Citizenship
G. Corporate Accountability
III. Recommendations
CHAPTER 7 Conclusion
Index.
Notă biografică
Denise Wallace received her J.S.D. (2014) in Intercultural Human Rights (magna cum laude), LL.M., Intercultural Human Rights, Class Valedictorian (summa cum laude) from St. Thomas University; J.D., Southern University; M.A., Intercultural Leadership, Service & Management, School for International Training, Brattleboro, VT.; and B.A., Journalism/English, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA.