Roger Alford at OpinioJuris has a very instructive post (and link to his article) on an emerging legal strategy for holding nations accountable for human rights abuses. There are various legal barriers/difficulties to directly sanctioning nations, so some have taken to suing corporations which work with rights abusing nations instead. The upshot and hope of this strategy is that the corporations will in turn incorporate rights preserving/protecting measures in their contracts with sovereign nations. If sued, corporations will have legal avenues to pursue nations to have them help pay for damages. The upshot is that nations will then have a monetary incentive for avoiding rights abuses.
I'm not crazy about the idea of a market for human rights violations (Alford does not advocate this, but merely describes it), but if it helps facilitate a downturn in their incidence, then so much the better.
His accompanying law review article is well worth reading.
Friday, April 25, 2008
Holding accountable for human rights abuses
Posted by MT Nguyen at 8:45 AM
Labels: corporations, human rights, law
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