Business and Human Rights
The regulation of business in the global economy poses one of the main challenges for governance, as illustrated by the dynamic scholarly and policy debates about the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights and a possible international treaty on the matter. This book takes on the conceptual and legal underpinnings of global governance approaches to business and human rights, with an emphasis on the Guiding Principles (GPs) and attention to the current treaty process. Analyses of the GPs have tended to focus on their static dimension, such as the standards they include, rather than on their capacity to change, to push the development of new norms, and practices that might go beyond the initial content of the GPs and improve corporate compliance with human rights. This book engages both the static and dynamic dimensions of the GPs, and considers the issue through the eyes of scholars and practitioners from different parts of the world.
- Offers the first systematic effort by prominent business and human rights scholars and practitioners to take stock of the Guiding Principles and the broader theoretical, legal, and policy debates and initiatives they have sparked
- Contributes to a dynamic and timely debate that has gained widespread attention in academic and policy circles regarding the protection of human rights in business proceedings
- Features chapters by scholars and practitioners from across the globe, including John Ruggie
Product details
December 2018Paperback
9781316626924
219 pages
230 × 150 × 10 mm
0.32kg
Available
Table of Contents
- Introduction. A dialogue across divides in the business and human rights field César RodrÃguez-Garavito
- Part I. Global Governance Meets Business and Human Rights: Conceptual Debates and Regulatory Alternatives:
- 1. Business and human rights: beyond the end of the beginning César RodrÃguez-Garavito
- 2. Regulating multinationals: the UN guiding principles, civil society, and international legalization John Ruggie
- 3. Time to move beyond the 'present': the guiding principles, a treaty or a UN declaration on business and human rights? Surya Deva
- 4. Putting 'human rights' back into the UN guiding principles and international law on business and human rights: shifting frames and embedding participation rights Tara J. Melish
- 5. From guiding principles to interpretive organizations: developing a framework for applying the UNGPs to disputes that institutionalizes the advocacy role of civil society Larry Catá Backer
- 6. A treaty on business and human rights? A recurring debate in a new governance landscape Claret Vargas
- Part II. The Practice of Business and Human Rights: Advocacy and Regulatory Strategies:
- 7. Shifting power on business and human rights: states, corporations and civil society in global governance Chris Jochnick
- 8. Always in all ways: ensuring business respect for human rights through national action plans and inter-governmental regulatory frameworks Amol Mehra
- 9. Business and human rights: moving beyond the beginning Louis Bickford
- 10. Regulatory environment on business and human rights: paths at the international level and ideas about the roles for civil society groups Juana Kweitel
- 11. Committing the crime of poverty: the next phase of the business and human rights debate Bonita Meyersfeld
- Conclusion. Whither the human rights movement? An ecosystemic view César RodrÃguez-Garavito
- Index.