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Full-Text Articles in Law
Atrocities By Corporate Actors: A Historical Perspective, Michael J. Kelly
Atrocities By Corporate Actors: A Historical Perspective, Michael J. Kelly
Case Western Reserve Journal of International Law
The article focuses on developments in international criminal law in addressing corporate human rights violations.
Corporate Liability For Human Rights Violations: The Future Of The Alien Tort Claims Act, Milena Sterio
Corporate Liability For Human Rights Violations: The Future Of The Alien Tort Claims Act, Milena Sterio
Case Western Reserve Journal of International Law
The article discusses issue of corporate liability under the U.S. Alien Tort Claims Act.
Liberals Vs Romantics: Challenges Of An Emerging Corporate International Criminal Law, Carsten Stahn
Liberals Vs Romantics: Challenges Of An Emerging Corporate International Criminal Law, Carsten Stahn
Case Western Reserve Journal of International Law
Holding bystanders and corporate agents accountable for international crimes is often at the periphery of international criminal justice. Based on its liberal foundations, international criminal law has traditionally been strongly centered on individual agency. In the industrialist cases after World War II, individual criminal responsibility was used to demonstrate and sanction corporate involvement in crime. Ideas of corporate criminal responsibility have been voiced in the post-war era and in the context of the negotiations of the Statute. In recent years, they have witnessed a renaissance in several contexts: the jurisprudence of the Special Tribunal for Lebanon, the Malabo Protocol of …