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20 result(s) for "Szablowski, David"
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Economic Diplomacy and Home State Responsibility for Human Rights Abuses Involving Extractive Industries Abroad: The Case of Canada
The debate over home state responsibility for human rights has focused on how home states might use accountability mechanisms to promote respect for human rights among their businesses abroad. However, a set of activists and researchers have opened a new front on the question of home state responsibility by focusing on the activities of Canadian diplomats providing advice and consular services to extractive firms abroad. This work documents how home states can be directly implicated in business and human rights controversies and how home state diplomats can put human rights defenders at increased risk. This paper outlines the growing body of research on the hidden influence of Canadian economic diplomacy in human rights controversies, suggesting a troubling disregard for corporate social responsibility and human rights concerns in these contexts, and making the case for robust accountability mechanisms to influence the conduct of both corporate actors and diplomatic officials.
Transnational Law and Local Struggles
The global spread of transnational mining investment, which has been taking place since the 1990s, has led to often volatile conflicts with local communities. This book examines the regulation of these conflicts through national, transnational and local legal processes. In doing so, it examines how legal authority is being redistributed among public and private actors, as well as national and transnational actors, as a result of globalizing forces.
Mining, Displacement and the World Bank: A Case Analysis of Compania Minera Antamina's Operations in Peru
The transformation in the structure of the world mining industry over the last decade has opened up enormous new regions for mineral exploration and development by transnational mining companies in countries in the South. This new access has inevitably brought mining companies into conflict with local communities. With the involvement of transnational advocacy networks and new global publics, these conflicts have prompted a growing transnational debate on the principles that ought to govern mining and community relationships. One effort to provide guidance on this question comes from the World Bank's Operational Directive 4.30 on Involuntary Resettlement. This paper examines the regulatory impact of this policy upon relationships between mining companies and communities, as well as its \"legitimation effect\" in providing standards which, once met, can serve to certify a degree of responsible behaviour on the part of the company. The analysis of the effects of the directive is taken up in the form a case study involving a transnational mining company operating in the Andes of Peru and the local communities impacted by its land acquisition project.
John Willis and the Challenges for Public Law Scholarship in a Neoliberal Globalizing World
John Willis was vigorously engaged in the central public law debates of his day. An eloquent spokesman for his cause, Willis championed the administrative state that was emerging over the course of his career. Together with his functionalist contemporaries elsewhere in the common law world, Willis challenged conventional legal discourse and developed a powerful critique of formalism, the then-dominant school of legal scholarship. These scholars sought to connect public law with what they saw as the modern realities of government. In doing so, they asserted a new way of conceptualizing the state and public accountability in a democratic society.
Transnational Law and Local Struggles: Mining Communities and the World Bank
A report on the global spread of transnational mining investment since the 1990s and the conflicts that this spread has created in developing nations. In particular, the book looks at the operation of the transnational working of the World Bank in mining.