Business and Human Rights
By: Wettstein, Florian.
Material type:
Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due |
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CSHL Library | 658.40 WET 2022 Co.1/2 (Browse shelf) | Not for loan | |
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CSHL Library | 658.40 WET 2022 Co.2/2 (Browse shelf) | Not for loan |
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658.15 GEE 2012 The foundation center's guide to proposal writing / | 658.4 MAL 2019 Corporate Governance | 658.4 THO 2012 Corporate Governance | 658.40 WET 2022 Co.1/2 Business and Human Rights | 658.40 WET 2022 Co.2/2 Business and Human Rights | 658.407 SCH 2019 Trillion dollar coach : | 658.408 RES 2020 Research handbook on human rights and business / |
Preface; Boxes; 1. Introduction: learning and unlearning business and human rights; Part I. Foundations; 2. BHR: emergence and history of a movement; 3. A brief introduction of human rights; Part II. Setting the scene; 4. Corporate human rights violations: direct and indirect; 5. Corporate human rights violations: overview of issues; Part III. Corporate human rights responsibility; 6. Justification of corporate human rights responsibility; 7. Nature and extent of corporate human rights responsibility; 8. Operationalizing and implementing human rights responsibility at the corporate level; Part IV. Corporate human rights accountability; 9. Transnational governance and corporate human rights accountability: preliminary questions and foundational issues; 10. The un guiding principles on BHR: foundations, contemplations, critique; 11. Further international soft-law standards and voluntary initiatives; 12. Home state solutions; 13. International law-based solutions; Part V. Selected industries and emerging discussions; 14. Industry-specific issues and challenges; 15. Emerging discussions and narratives; 16. Conclusion: building back better; Helpful online resources and blogs on business and human rights; References of court cases; Glossary; Bibliography; Index.
"Until recently, human rights and business were perceived as two separate domains. Human rights, traditionally understood as a shield and protection for human beings against the abuse of governmental power and discretion were seen as of little direct implication for business. As a consequence, private actors like corporations were not systematically on the radar of human rights scholars. Vice versa, those concerned with corporations and corporate responsibility, both in practice and in theory, hardly adopted a human rights perspective. Human rights, for them, were a part of the larger legal, regulatory and policy frame within which corporate practices are taking place, but they were not themselves a part of corporate responsibility engagements. Hence, bringing business and human rights together has neither been intuitive for human rights scholars nor for corporate responsibility researchers"
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