Amazon cover image
Image from Amazon.com

Business and human rights in Europe : international law challenges / edited by Angelica Bonfanti.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextSeries: Transnational law and governancePublication details: New York, NY : Routledge, 2019.Description: xxiv, 264 pages ; 24 cmISBN:
  • 9781138484672
  • 9780367586034
  • 0367586037
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Online version:: Business and human rights in Europe.DDC classification:
  • 346.2407 23
LOC classification:
  • KJC2467 .B87 2019
Contents:
Introduction / Angelica Bonfanti -- Sustainable development goals in Europe and their intersection with the business & human rights framework / Paolo Davide Farah -- Managing global interdependencies through law and governance : the European approach to business and human rights / Daniel Augenstein -- Enforcing the state duty to protect under the UN guiding principles on business and human rights : Strasbourg views / Marco Fasciglione -- Are European home states of transnational corporations responsible for their impacts abroad under the ECHR? / Claire Methven O'Brien -- The duty to protect in public procurement : toward a mandatory human rights clause? / Deborah Russo -- The EU's promotion of human rights and sustainable development through PTAs as a tool to influence business regulation in third countries / Leonardo Borlini -- National action plans : a pathway to effective implementation of the United Nations guiding principles? / Marta Bordigno -- European approaches to promoting responsible supply chains / Cindy S. Woods -- Due diligence, reporting and transparency in supply chains : the United Kingdom Modern Slavery Act / Olga Martin-Ortega -- Blending together human rights due diligence with "criminal" law : opportunities and pitfalls of the Italian solution / Paola Cavanna -- From human rights due diligence to duty of vigilance : taking the French example to the EU level / Tiphaine Beau de Lom�enie, Sandra Cossart, Paige Morrow -- Corporate human rights compliance and disinvestment : lessons from the Norwegian sovereign wealth fund / Ludovica Chiussi -- EU approaches on "conflict minerals": are they consistent with the UN/OED supply chain due diligence standards? / Valentina Grado -- ICT companies' responsibility to respect human rights : remarks in the light of the EU General Data Protection Regulation / Angelica Bonfanti -- Access to remedy for the victims of corporate-related human rights abuse : assessing the contribution of the fundamental rights agency / Carmen M�arquez Carrasco -- Adjudicate this! : foreign direct liability and civil jurisdiction in Europe / Lucas Roorda -- The civil liability of the parent company for the acts or omissions of its subsidiary : the example of the Shell cases in the UK and in the Netherlands / Claire Bright -- Corporate liability and human rights : access to criminal judicial remedies in Europe / Adriana Espinosa Gonz�alez, Marta Sosa Navarro -- European trends in tort law remedies to address corporate human rights abuses / Florentine Vos -- Concluding remarks / Angelica Bonfanti.
Summary: "Transnational business activities are important drivers of growth for developing and the least developed countries. However, they can also negatively impact the enjoyment of human rights. In some cases, multinational enterprises (MNEs) have even been accused of grave human rights abuses in the territory of the states where their subsidiaries operate. Since the parent companies of many MNEs are incorporated under the law of European states, those countries' domestic law and the European legal framework play a crucial role in establishing how their activities should be conducted - also throughout their supply chains - and which remedies will be available when corporate human rights violations occur. In recent years, the European Union, the Council of Europe and their member states have been adopting policies and legislation to ensure respect for human rights by businesses and have developed a body of related case law. These legal instruments can be considered the European responses to the challenges posed at international-law level, and they constitute the focus of research of this book. Through its collected chapters - written by scholars and practitioners under the direction of the editor, Angelica Bonfanti - the book identifies the European solutions to the business and human rights international legal issues, provides an overall assessment of their effectiveness, and examines their potential evolution."--
Tags from this library: No tags from this library for this title. Log in to add tags.

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Introduction / Angelica Bonfanti -- Sustainable development goals in Europe and their intersection with the business & human rights framework / Paolo Davide Farah -- Managing global interdependencies through law and governance : the European approach to business and human rights / Daniel Augenstein -- Enforcing the state duty to protect under the UN guiding principles on business and human rights : Strasbourg views / Marco Fasciglione -- Are European home states of transnational corporations responsible for their impacts abroad under the ECHR? / Claire Methven O'Brien -- The duty to protect in public procurement : toward a mandatory human rights clause? / Deborah Russo -- The EU's promotion of human rights and sustainable development through PTAs as a tool to influence business regulation in third countries / Leonardo Borlini -- National action plans : a pathway to effective implementation of the United Nations guiding principles? / Marta Bordigno -- European approaches to promoting responsible supply chains / Cindy S. Woods -- Due diligence, reporting and transparency in supply chains : the United Kingdom Modern Slavery Act / Olga Martin-Ortega -- Blending together human rights due diligence with "criminal" law : opportunities and pitfalls of the Italian solution / Paola Cavanna -- From human rights due diligence to duty of vigilance : taking the French example to the EU level / Tiphaine Beau de Lom�enie, Sandra Cossart, Paige Morrow -- Corporate human rights compliance and disinvestment : lessons from the Norwegian sovereign wealth fund / Ludovica Chiussi -- EU approaches on "conflict minerals": are they consistent with the UN/OED supply chain due diligence standards? / Valentina Grado -- ICT companies' responsibility to respect human rights : remarks in the light of the EU General Data Protection Regulation / Angelica Bonfanti -- Access to remedy for the victims of corporate-related human rights abuse : assessing the contribution of the fundamental rights agency / Carmen M�arquez Carrasco -- Adjudicate this! : foreign direct liability and civil jurisdiction in Europe / Lucas Roorda -- The civil liability of the parent company for the acts or omissions of its subsidiary : the example of the Shell cases in the UK and in the Netherlands / Claire Bright -- Corporate liability and human rights : access to criminal judicial remedies in Europe / Adriana Espinosa Gonz�alez, Marta Sosa Navarro -- European trends in tort law remedies to address corporate human rights abuses / Florentine Vos -- Concluding remarks / Angelica Bonfanti.

"Transnational business activities are important drivers of growth for developing and the least developed countries. However, they can also negatively impact the enjoyment of human rights. In some cases, multinational enterprises (MNEs) have even been accused of grave human rights abuses in the territory of the states where their subsidiaries operate. Since the parent companies of many MNEs are incorporated under the law of European states, those countries' domestic law and the European legal framework play a crucial role in establishing how their activities should be conducted - also throughout their supply chains - and which remedies will be available when corporate human rights violations occur. In recent years, the European Union, the Council of Europe and their member states have been adopting policies and legislation to ensure respect for human rights by businesses and have developed a body of related case law. These legal instruments can be considered the European responses to the challenges posed at international-law level, and they constitute the focus of research of this book. Through its collected chapters - written by scholars and practitioners under the direction of the editor, Angelica Bonfanti - the book identifies the European solutions to the business and human rights international legal issues, provides an overall assessment of their effectiveness, and examines their potential evolution."--

There are no comments on this title.

to post a comment.

African Court on Human and Peoples' Rights | For Inquiries Contact » +255 272 510 510