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引用次数: 1
摘要
全球供应链对国内和国际的公司法和公司治理提出了重大挑战。它们在国际商业中日益重要,造成了严重的管理空白,特别是考虑到企业参与侵犯人权、剥削劳工和环境恶化。除了《联合国商业与人权指导原则》(UN’s Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights)等一系列国际规范之外,国内和国际法律中披露条款的数量也在激增,要求企业在应对全球供应链引发的问题时提高透明度。然而,本文认为信息披露不足以解决这些问题。有人建议,我们应该用不同的供应链结构概念来解决问题。如果我们把它们视为“全球贫困链”,这种观点会带来道德上的回应——认识到我们有集体责任消除贫困和由这些链条造成的痛苦。这一反应需要改变透明度要求,并伴随着一个使贫困受害者能够摆脱贫困的管理框架。
Collective Responsibility and the Limits of Disclosure in Regulating Global Supply Chains
Global supply chains present major challenges for company law and corporate governance, nationally and internationally. Their increasing relevance in international business has led to a serious regulatory gap, especially in light of corporate involvement in human rights abuses, labour exploitation and environmental degradation. Alongside a number of international norms such as those expressed in the UN’s Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights, there has been a proliferation in domestic and international law of disclosure provisions, mandating greater transparency by companies in response to the problems caused by global supply chains. In this paper, however, it is argued that disclosure is not a sufficient answer to such problems. It is suggested that we should approach the problems with a different conceptualisation of supply chain structures. If we regard them as ‘global poverty chains’, such a perspective brings about a moral response — a recognition that we have a collective responsibility to eradicate the poverty and suffering caused by the chains. This response necessitates that transparency requirements be altered and accompanied by a regulatory framework that empowers victims of poverty to be able to escape it.