Advertisement:



Thursday, March 18th, 2010
Businesses
Consultants
Business Councils
NGOs
Academic Networks
Research Institutes
Journals
english
german
CSR reports
Jobs
Events
Call for Papers
New Publications
Podcast
New York Times
Washington Post
Times online
more >>>
WBCSD
Eldis
GreenBiz
more >>>


Use CSR NEWS also through the following services designed for your needs:


Daily News per Email


Weekly News per Email


Become CSR NEWS-Friend
on Facebook !


CSR NEWS updates
through Twitter


RSS-Feeds


csr-mobile.net


New Issue 6/3 (2005) of the Journal of Ethics, Business and Economics (zfwu): Human Rights and Business


Wednesday, February 15th, 2006


The new issue 6/2 (2005) of the zfwu has been released with the title “Human Rights and Business”

Content:

Corporate Human Rights Responsibilities
David Weissbrodt

This article begins with a discussion of why one should be concerned or at least interested in the human rights conduct of corporations. Hence, the first part of the article presents a couple of historical and current situations which require attention and standard-setting. The second part focuses on past efforts of international law and particularly international human rights law to deal with such non-state actors as corporations. The third part discusses five major attributes of the U.N. Human Rights Norms which built upon the previous efforts to deal with the human rights conduct of corporations. The fourth part traces the process by which the Norms were prepared and are now being considered by the U.N. Commission on Human Rights. The fifth part identifies three principal issues raised by the opponents to the Norms. And the article concludes with an account of how the Norms are already being used by businesses, mutual funds, and others.

Comment
Are “Human Rights” the “Business of Business”?
Klaus M. Leisinger

Voluntary or Mandatory: That is (Not) the Question. Linking Corporate Citizenship to Human Rights Obligations for Business
Florian Wettstein und Sandra Waddock

Human rights have traditionally been considered a domain of governments. The ongoing economic globalization, however, has rendered this state-centered view increasingly inadequate. In this contribution we will argue that also the powerful transnational corporations must bear more and more direct responsibility for the impact of their actions on human rights. Florian Wettstein and Sandra Waddock will first clarify the conceptual connection between existing approaches to corporate citizenship (CC) and corporate social responsibility (CSR) and the newly emerging “business and human rights” debate. Partly in contradiction to the “traditional” view on CSR/CC as a voluntary affair for business, we will then plea for mandatory human rights standards for corporations. However, human rights obligations are not always clear-cut and evident; especially so-called positive rights often create contingent and often highly ambiguous duties for many different actors. Therefore, we will argue CSR/CC can make a valuable contribution especially regarding the clarification of such imperfect obligations. Accordingly, the relation between voluntary and mandatory approaches must not be seen as a mutually exclusive one, but rather as inherently complementary.

Comment
‘Voluntary or Mandatory: That is (Not) the Question’. A Comment
Nicholas Howen

Menschenrechte und internationale Geschäftstätigkeit – Positionen und Ansätze zum Umgang mit einer regulativen und diskursiven Kluft
Bernhard Mark-Ungericht

Human Rights and International Business – Positions and Approaches to Deal with a Regulatory and Discoursive Gap

This article is based on two perspectives of the current situation. The first perspective portrays the idea that human rights and international business are not connected by regulatory mechanisms, while the second suggests that the obvious and ensuing gap is reflected in the realm of discourses: a neoliberal inspired discourse on the integration of Human Rights and International Business on the one side and a critical (activist) discourse on the impacts of International Business on the other. Both discourses frame the relation between International Business and International Human Rights according to their premises. Based on these two perspectives three approaches dealing with the attempt to integrate Human Rights into International Business will be discussed.




INFORMATION DESK
PRINT
SAVE AS PDF
TELL A FRIEND

AUTHOR
Walter Schmidt (editor)



EMAIL TO THE AUTHOR

CATEGORIES: ++New Publications | +Journals | +english | Zeitschrift für Wirtschafts- und Unternehmensethik

RELATED ARTICLES
  • Call for Papers: zfwu 7/3 (2006), special issue on: Culture and Economy
  • Call for Papers: zfwu 7/2 (2006), special issue on: Political Economy
  • Call for Papers: Economic Ethics and the Third Sector
  • Bibliography of Business Ethics Articles
  • Service: csr-literature.net
  • New Website: csr-literature.net – The online bibliography in business ethics (Beta version)
  • Universal Declaration of Human Rights Turns 60
  • Economic Sociology and Ethics – special issue, Call for Papers: zfwu 8/1 (2007)
  • New Issue of Journal of Business Ethics (volume 73, number 3)
  • New Issue of Business Ethics Quarterly (18/2)
  • The new issue of Journal of Business Ethics
  • Neue Webseite: csr-literature.net – Die online Bibliographie in Unternehmensethik (Beta-Version)
  • New Issue of Journal of Business Ethics (volume 74, number 1)
  • New Issue of Journal of Business Ethics (90/4)
  • New Issue of Journal of Business Ethics (volume 73, number 4)
  • New Issue of Journal of Business Ethics (vol. 75, number 2)
  • New Issue of Journal of Business Ethics (vol. 74, number 2)
  • New Issue of Journal of Business Ethics (vol. 75, number 1)
  • Business Ethics Quarterly (BEQ)
  • New Issue of Journal of Business Ethics (vol. 75, number 3)


  • OTHER ARTICLES BY THIS AUTHOR
    14 other articles by Walter Schmidt (editor)





















    © 2005-2010 | CSR NEWS GmbH | CSR NEWS is a project of the Corporate Responsibility Foundation
    Contact: editors@csr-news.net | Phone: +49 (0) 2192 – 877 0000
    Disclaimer | Legal Notice | Powered by WordPress | 1.929 seconds | web design by kollundkollegen.