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Business and Human Rights as Law: Towards Justiciability of Rights, Involvement, and Remedy

Business and human rights is rapidly emerging as a legal discipline in the wake of global developments in legislation, litigation, and international law. But the contours of corporate risk and the evolving legal standard of care remain shrouded in uncertainty. This innovative text shows lawyers how to unravel the ambiguity.
Langue De Publication: English
Book
160,00 $
Quantité

Softcover | 248 pages

En stock
Publié: 18 mars 2019
ISBN/ISSN: 9780433478607

Détails des produits

Cited by the Supreme Court of Canada in the Nevsun Resources Ltd. v. Araya case

As the authors explain in the Introduction to this book, the United Nations Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights are transforming corporate responsibility from public relations art to legal science. While the Guiding Principles are soft law, their definition of business respect for human rights has inspired a paradigm shift in human rights-related corporate legal risk through a wave of national legislation and transnational litigation. The contours of the emerging legal risk, however, are vague.

Business and Human Rights as Law: Towards Justiciability of Rights, Involvement, and Remedy is the first text to subject the Guiding Principles’ foundational concepts to legal analysis in search of precise, practical, and replicable guidance. The result is a unique blend of theory and practice—illustrated through complex, real-world examples—to help lawyers and judges unearth the objective bases of corporate human rights responsibility and liability.  

Features:

  • An overview of the Guiding Principles’ practical, governance-based expectations of business respect for human rights, highlighting the similarities with corruption compliance programs.
  • A global survey of trends in litigation, legislation, and international law related to corporate human rights governance and risk management.
  • Rights: An analysis of how international human rights law, conceived to bind public actors, can reasonably and practically be translated into a purely private context, drawing on equity and abuse of right.
  • Involvement: A multidisciplinary investigation of the practical meaning of cause, contribute, directly linked, and omission to provide principled certainty regarding which adverse human rights impacts businesses are expected to foresee, identify, and address.
  • Grievance mechanisms: An exploration of how to evaluate the effectiveness of a private remedial process, drawing on extracts from an assessment of an extremely complex and controversial operational-level grievance mechanism established by Barrick Gold in Papua New Guinea.
  • Remedy: An analysis of how to ensure remedial outcomes are rights-compatible by translating the right to remedy from a public to private context, with reference to legitimate corporate ends and constraints.

A novel and practical treatise

This book would be a useful resource for:

  • Corporate disputes and transaction counsel who advise leading businesses on navigating global human rights liability and governance expectations.
  • Judges and arbitrators who need to hear and resolve transnational, human rights-related civil claims
  • Academics who seek to understand and explore the quickly evolving legal discipline of business and human rights.
  • In-house counsel who advise on designing human rights and sustainability governance policies and procedures to navigate legal, financial, and reputational risk.
 

Auteurs à la une

Table des matières

Chapter 1: Introduction: Towards justiciability 
A. The evolution of corporate responsibility
B. The justiciability challenge
C. Overview of this book
D. Our interpretive approach

Chapter 2: Legal risk
A. Introduction: Business and human rights as a legal science
B. Litigation: Adjudicating responsibility for human rights
C. Legislation: The grand experiment
D. International treaty
E. Towards a justiciable standard of care for business and human rights

Chapter 3: Rights
A. Introduction
B. The structure of rights
C. The structure of human rights
D. A typology of human rights
E. The Guiding Principles and the two dimensions of rights
F. Conclusion

Chapter 4: Involvement
A. Introduction
B. Fact pattern: Modern slavery and the financial sector
C. Cause or contribute
D. Omission
E. Directly linked
F. Conclusion
G. Case studies: Cause and contribute
H. Case studies: Directly linked

Chapter 5: Grievance mechanisms
A. Introduction
B. Case study: Overview of the Framework
C. Assessment of the Framework
D. Lessons from the Framework
Appendix: Indicators for an adjudicative operational-level grievance mechanism

Chapter 6: Rights-compatible remedy
A. Introduction
B. Effective remedy in international law
C. Conclusion

Postscript: A word of caution and a call to arms