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BEQ 22, 1 (2012) "Human Rights & Business" - available online

  • 1.  BEQ 22, 1 (2012) "Human Rights & Business" - available online

    Posted 12-07-2011 12:12

    The special issue articles from Business Ethics Quarterly 22,1 (January 2012) on "Human Right and Business" is available for free online for a limited time.  To access those articles follow the link at the end of the abstracts.

     
    Volume 22, Number 1 - 2012 - Business Ethics Quarterly



    Denis G. Arnold
    Wesley Cragg; Denis G. Arnold; Peter Muchlinski
    Guest Editors' Introduction - Human Rights and Business
    We provide a brief history of the business and human rights discourse and scholarship, and an overview of the articles included in the special issue.  http://secure.pdcnet.org/beq/free
    Wesley Cragg
    Ethics, Enlightened Self-Interest, and the Corporate Responsibility to Respect Human Rights - A Critical Look at the Justificatory Foundations of the UN Framework
    Central to the United Nations Framework setting out the human rights responsibilities of corporations proposed by John Ruggie is the principle that corporations have a responsibility to respect human rights in their operations whether or not doing so is required by law and whether or not human rights laws are actively enforced. Ruggie proposes that corporations should respect this principle in their strategic management and day-to-day operations for reasons of corporate (enlightened) self-interest. This paper identifies this as a serious weakness and argues that identifying the responsibility to respect human rights as an explicitly ethical obligation to be respected for that reason would provide a much stronger justificatory foundation for respecting the principle seen from a corporate perspective, given that corporations are accountable to their shareholders for their deployment of the firm's financial resources.  http://secure.pdcnet.org/beq/free
    Florian Wettstein
    Silence as Complicity - Elements of a Corporate Duty to Speak Out Against the Violation of Human Rights
    Increasingly, global businesses are confronted with the question of complicity in human rights violations committed by abusive host governments. This contribution specifically looks at silent complicity and the way it challenges conventional interpretations of corporate responsibility. Silent complicity implies that corporations have moral obligations that reach beyond the negative realm of doing no harm. Essentially, it implies that corporations have a moral responsibility to help protect human rights by putting pressure on perpetrating host governments involved in human rights abuses. This is a controversial claim, which this contribution proposes to analyze with a view to understanding and determining the underlying conditions that need to be met in order for moral agents to be said to have such responsibilities in the category of the duty to protect human rights.  http://secure.pdcnet.org/beq/free
    Stepan Wood
    The Case for Leverage-Based Corporate Human Rights Responsibility
    Should companies' human rights responsibilities arise, in part, from their "leverage" - their ability to influence others' actions through their relationships? Special Representative John Ruggie rejected this proposition in the United Nations Framework for business and human rights. I argue that leverage is a source of responsibility where there is a morally significant connection between the company and a rights-holder or rights-violator, the company is able to make a contribution to ameliorating the situation, it can do so at modest cost, and the threat to human rights is substantial. In such circumstances companies have a responsibility to exercise leverage even though they did nothing to contribute to the situation. Such responsibility is qualified, not categorical; graduated, not binary; context-specific; practicable; consistent with the social role of business; and not merely a negative responsibility to avoid harm but a positive responsibility to do good.  http://secure.pdcnet.org/beq/free
    Aaron A. Dhir
    Shareholder Engagement in the Embedded Business Corporation - Investment Activism, Human Rights, and TWAIL Discourse
    The expansion of extractive corporations' overseas business operations has led to serious concerns regarding human rights-related impacts. As these apprehensions grow, we see a countervailing rise in calls for government intervention and in levels of socially conscious shareholder advocacy. I focus on the latter as manifested in recent use of the shareholder proposal mechanism found in corporate law. Shareholder proposals, while under-theorized, provide a valuable lens through which to consider the argument that economic behaviour is embedded within social relations. In doing so, I situate my analysis within Third World Approaches to International Law (TWAIL) scholarship. Elsewhere, I have supported the use of corporate law tools in advancing the international human rights enterprise and argued that investment activism can be an essential component of this advancement. This paper represents a reflexive pause. Using the case study of a recent proposal submitted to Goldcorp Inc., I seek to problematize the shareholder proposal as a human rights advocacy tool and to examine it as a site of contestation.  http://secure.pdcnet.org/beq/free
    John Douglas Bishop
    The Limits of Corporate Human Rights Obligations and the Rights of For-Profit Corporations
    The extension of human rights obligations to corporations raises questions about whose rights and which rights corporations are responsible for. This paper gives a partial answer by asking what legal rights corporations would need to have to fulfil various sorts of human rights obligations. We should compare the chances of human rights fulfilment (and violations) that are likely to result from assigning human rights obligations to corporations with the chances of human rights fulfilment (and violations) that are likely to result from giving corporations the legal rights needed to undertake those human rights obligations. Corporations should respect basic human rights of all people. Non-complicity in human rights violations requires that corporations have the right to political freedom of speech. To actively protect people from human rights violations, corporations need the right to hire armed security personnel; such obligations should be limited to protecting corporate property and narrowly defined stakeholders. Obligations to spend corporate resources on human rights fulfilment are confined to contributing to specific projects. Corporations have no obligation to ensure a society in which human rights are fulfilled. This principle helps us understand why corporate obligations are substantially different from those of governments.  http://secure.pdcnet.org/beq/free
    Peter Muchlinski
    Implementing the New UN Corporate Human Rights Framework - Implications for Corporate Law, Governance, and Regulation
    The UN Framework on Human Rights and Business comprises the State's duty to protect human rights, the corporate responsibility to respect human rights, and the duty to remedy abuses. This paper focuses on the corporate responsibility to respect. It considers how to overcome obstacles, arising out of national and international law, to the development of a legally binding corporate duty to respect human rights. It is argued that the notion of human rights due diligence will lead to the creation of binding legal duties and that principles of corporate and tort law can be adapted to this end. Furthermore, recent legal developments accept an "enlightened shareholder value" approach allowing corporate managers to consider human rights issues when making decisions. The responsibility to respect involves adaptation of shareholder based corporate governance towards a more stakeholder oriented approach and could lead to the development of a new, stakeholder based, corporate model.  http://secure.pdcnet.org/beq/free
    Norman E. Bowie
    Stephen R. C. Hicks
    Patricia H. Werhane


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