Silent Corporate Complicity of Transnational Corporations in Gross Human Rights Violations Committed by Host States
thesis
posted on 2023-08-04, 19:13authored byLuna Barakat
<p>This paper reveals, through an examination of the case of corporate silent complicity (SCC) a prolonged weakness in the international standards asserting the accountability of transnational corporations (TNCs). SCC here refers to cases where TNCs become complicit in gross human rights abuses committed by host-State's actors, by virtue of being silent. While SCC might attract criminal responsibility for the officials of the TNC in question on the national/international level, and/or civil liability of the TNC and/or its employees on the national level, thus far the international community has not condemned it in an effective and consistent manner. That is due the fact that the international community has yet adopted binding standards for TNCs. The solution is to adopt a new binding international mechanism identifying TNCs' human rights obligations in light of their commitments to their new global social role as reflected in international standards and through consideration of recent progressive approaches calling to incorporate human rights concerns in company's governance. The new International Convention on TNCs Human Rights Responsibilities (ICTHRR), should hold TNCs accountable when implicated in SCC, additionally it should establish an international mechanism that guarantees and monitors its implementation.</p>
History
Publisher
ProQuest
Language
English
Handle
http://hdl.handle.net/1961/16537
Committee chair
Perry Wallace
Committee member(s)
Mohamed Mattar; Brenda Smith
Degree discipline
Juridical Science
Degree grantor
Washington College of Law. American University
Degree level
Doctoral
Degree name
S.J.D. Washington College of Law, American University, 2014
Local identifier
thesesdissertations_463_OBJ.pdf
Media type
application/pdf
Pagination
315 pages
Access statement
Electronic thesis is restricted to authorized American University users only, per author's request.