1. | Olsen, Sturla : Recovery for the lost use of water resources: M/V Testbank on the rocks?, 1992 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial Recovery for the lost use of water resources: M/V Testbank on the rocks? / Olsen, Sturla REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): Tulane Law Review : 67. - Tulane, 1992. LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
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2. | Colonomos, Ariel : Unilateral jurisdiction, 2004 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial Unilateral jurisdiction : universal jurisdiction a la Americaine in the age of post-realist power / Colonomos, Ariel REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): Human rights review : vol. 5; no. 2 (January-March)., p. 22-47. - Piscataway, NJ : Transaction Publ., 2004. - ISSN 1524-8879 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
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3. | Zerk, Jennifer A. : Multinationals and corporate social responsibility, 2006 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph series Multinationals and corporate social responsibility : limitations and opportunities in international law / Zerk, Jennifer A. - (Cambridge studies in international and comparative law), xxviii, 335 p.. - Cambridge : Cambridge university press, 2006. ISBN 0-521-84499-1 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Contents:. Part I. Regulatory Issues and Problems:. 1. Multinationals and corporate social responsibility: a new regulatory agenda. 2. Multinationals under international law. 3. Multinationals under national law: the problem of jurisdiction. Part II. Home State Regulation of Multinationals:. 4. New directions in extraterritorial regulation of CSR standards. 5. Private claims for personal injury and environmental harm. Part III. International Regulation of Multinationals:. 6. Towards an international law of CSR?. 7. Multinationals and CSR: limitations and opportunities in international law. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): The OECD guidelines for multinational enterprises, ILO tripartite declaration of principles concerning multinational enterprises and social policy
URL http://www.cambridge.org/catalogue/catalogue.asp?ISBN=9780521844994 |
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4. | Ziegler, Katja S. (ed.) : Human rights and private law, 2007 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph series Human rights and private law : privacy as autonomy / Ziegler, Katja S. (ed.) - (Studies of the Oxford institute of European and Comparative law ; vol. 5), xxviii, 214 p.. - Oxford : Hart Publishing, 2007. ISBN 1-84113-714-6 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Contents:. 1. Human rights and private law - privacy as autonomy, Katja Ziegler. 2. The core business of privacy law: protecting autonomy, Hans Nieuwenhuis. 3. Human rights and private law, Lorenz Fastrich. 4. Horizontality and the Human Rights Act 1998, Alison Young. 5. Horizontal effect of fundamental rights, privacy and social justice, Aurelia Colombi Ciacchi. 6. A right to privacy?, NW Barber. 7. Privacy and tort design, Roderick Bagshaw. 8. Damages as a remedy for infringements upon privacy, Siewert Lindenbergh. 9. Privacy of contract, Henricus Snijders. 10. Discrimination in private law - new European principles and the freedom of contract, Dagmar Coester-Waltjen. 11. Protection of employees' individual rights in the employer-employee relationship, Michael Coester. 12. Privacy, employment and the Human Rights Act 1998, Mark Freedland. 13. Constitutional protection of authors' moral rights in the European Union - between privacy, property and the regulation of the economy, Josef Drexl. 14. Private control/public speech, Leslie Kim Treiger-Bar-Am and Michael Spence. 15. The princess and the press: privacy after Caroline von Hannover v Germany, Katja Ziegler. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): ECHR, EU constitution
URL http://www.hartpub.co.uk/books/details.asp?isbn=9781841137148 |
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5. | Cernic, Jernej Letnar (ed.) : Human rights and business, 2015 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Human rights and business : direct corporate accountability for human rights / Cernic, Jernej Letnar (ed.) ; Van Ho, Tara (ed.), xxx, 532 p. - Oisterwijk : Wolf Legal Publishers, 2015. ISBN 9789462402072 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. Introduction, by Jernej Letnar Cernic and Tara Van Ho. 1. Multinationals, human rights and international law: time to move beyond the 'state-centric' conception, by Surya Deva. 2. Direct international humanitarian obligations of non-state entities: analysis of the lex lata and the lex ferenda, by Nicolá Carrillo. 3. Transnational private regulation and human rights: the limitations of stateless law and the re-entry of the state, by Cedric Ryngaert. 4. An elephant in a room of porcelain: establishing corporate responsibility for human rights, by Jernej Letnar Cernic. 5. Corporations as agents of global justice, by Vojko Strahovnik. 6. Human rights due diligence and the responsible supply of minerals from conflict-affected areas: towards a normative framework?, by Mary E. Footer. 7. 'Due diligence' in 'transitional justice states': an obligation for greater transparency?, by Tara L. Van Ho. 8. Privatisation and the obligation to fulfil rights, by Nicholas McMurry. 9. Direct corporate human rights obligations under the right to health: from mere 'respecting' towards protecting and fulfilling, by Brigit Toebes. 10. Defying territorial limitations: regulating business conduct extraterritorially through establishing obligations in EU law and national law, Karin Buhmann. 11. Business & human rights: from a 'responsibility to respect' to legal obligations and enforcement, by Humberto Fernando Cantú Rivera. 12. Access to justice through company complaint mechanisms?, by Karin Lukas. 13. The Dutch Shell case: foreign direct liability claims as an avenue for holding multinational corporations accountable for human rights violations, by Dorothée Cambou. 14. The assessment of corporate conduct towards human rights in investor-state dispute settlement: why we should (and can) mix the sheep and the goats, by Adriana Espinosa Gonzáles. 15. Private military and security companies, transnational private regulation and public international law: from the public to the private and back again?, by Willem van Genugten, Nicola Jägers and Evgeni Moyakine. 16. State-owned enterprises and human rights: the qualification & the responsibility of the state, by Charline Daelman. 17. The worst forms of child labour in cocoa plantations in Côte d'Ivoire & direct obligations of transnational corporations, by Silvia Scarpa. 18. Corporate complicity for human rights violations in Africa post-Kiobel case, by Atabongawung Tamo. 19. Human rights obligations of transnational corporations in domestic tort law, Cees van Dam. 20. Transnational corporate liability for gendered harms in the fashion sector from an American and Danish perspective, by Sara Andersen. INDEX WORDS:
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