NGO expectations of companies and human rights

Rory Sullivan
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引用次数: 17

Abstract

Factors such as 'globalisation', the perceived growth in the power and influence of transnational corporations (TNCs), media coverage of company involvement in human rights violations and perceived weaknesses in international regulatory frameworks have raised public concerns about corporate responsibility for the protection of human rights. Human rights non-governmental organisations (NGOs) such as Amnesty International have invested significant effort in campaigning against companies, lobbying for binding regulation and defining their expectations of companies. This article provides an overview of the business and human rights debate, and assesses the manner in which NGO campaigning activity is starting to create soft law obligations, with the emergence of some consensus around the norms or standards against which companies should be judged, a growing acceptance on the part of companies that they do have responsibility for the protection and promotion of human rights and the growing involvement of government in voluntary initiatives relating to human rights. The debate on business on human rights also has broader implications as it sees one set of non-state actors (i.e. NGOs) working to define norms and legal obligations for another set of non-state actors (i.e. companies), with limited involvement of government. This contest of influences, which is duplicated in many other corporate social responsibility debates, is likely to be an ever more common approach to the development of soft, and probably hard, international law obligations.
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非政府组织对公司和人权的期望
诸如"全球化"、跨国公司权力和影响的明显增长、媒体对公司参与侵犯人权行为的报道以及国际监管框架的明显弱点等因素引起了公众对公司保护人权责任的关注。大赦国际(Amnesty International)等人权非政府组织(ngo)投入了大量精力,开展反对企业的活动,游说制定具有约束力的监管规定,并界定它们对企业的期望。本文概述了商业与人权的辩论,并评估了非政府组织的竞选活动开始创造软法律义务的方式,以及围绕公司应该被评判的规范或标准的一些共识的出现。越来越多的公司承认它们有责任保护和促进人权,政府越来越多地参与与人权有关的自愿倡议。关于企业对人权的辩论也具有更广泛的影响,因为它看到一组非国家行为者(即非政府组织)在政府有限参与的情况下,努力为另一组非国家行为者(即公司)定义规范和法律义务。这种影响力的较量,在许多其他企业社会责任的辩论中也有重复,很可能成为发展软的、可能是硬的国际法义务的一种越来越普遍的方式。
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