European Union Law

Non-State Actors and Human Rights

By Philip Alston
Oxford University Press July 2005

Specifications

ISBN-13
9780199272815
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Publication
July 2005
Format
Hardback , 400 pages
Jurisdiction
European Union ? Countri(es) for reference only

Details

  • Responsibility of Non-State Actors is one of the biggest and most critical challenges facing international law today
  • Covers the role of important non-governmental institutions including the IMF and the WTO
  • Assesses the challenge posed by the behaviour of transnational corporations

Can transnational corporations ignore human rights as long as governments don't hold them accountable? If the UN is put in charge of a territory, is it bound by human rights law? Does that body of law apply to private security contractors who use torture to achieve their goals? Does the right to freedom of speech apply in a private shopping mall which has become the modern-day town centre?



Under traditional approaches to human rights, non-State actors are beyond the direct reach of international human rights law. They cannot be parties to the relevant treaties and so they are only bound to the extent that obligations accepted by States can be applied to them by governments. The result is that entities including Non-Governmental Organizations, international organizations such as the UN and the IMF, private security contractors, and transnational corporations, along with many others, are generally considered not to be bound directly by human rights law.



This situation threatens to make a mockery of much of the international system of accountability for human rights violations. As privatization, outsourcing, and downsizing place ever more public or governmental functions into the hands of private actors, the human rights regime must adapt if it is to maintain its relevance. The contributors to this volume examine the different approaches that might be taken in order to ensure some degree of accountability. Making space in the legal regime to take account of the role of non-State actors is one of the biggest and most critical challenges facing international law today.

Readership: Scholars and advanced students of human rights and of international law

Table of Contents

Part I: Introduction
1: Philip Alston: The 'Not-a-Cat' Syndrome: Can the International Human Rights Regime Accommodate Non-State Actors?
2: August Reinisch: The Changing International Legal Framework for Dealing with Non-State Actors
Part II: Non-Governmental Organizations and International Organizations as Non-State Actors
3: Menno T. Kamminga: The Evolving Status of NGOs under International Law: A Threat to the Inter-State System?
4: François Gianviti: Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights and the International Monetary Fund
Part III: Corporations
5: Celia Wells and Juanita Elias: Catching the Conscience of the King: Corporate Players on the International Stage
6: Ralph Steinhardt: Corporate Responsibility and the International Law of Human Rights: The New Lex Mercatoria
7: Olivier de Schutter: The Accountability of Multinationals for Human Rights Violations in European Law
8: David Weissbrodt and Muria Kruger: Human Rights Responsibilities of Businesses as Non-State Actors
Mary Rumsey: Bibliography on Non-State Actors in International Law

About the Author

Philip Alston, Professor of Law at New York University Law School

Contributors:

Philip Alston


August Reinisch


Menno T. Kamminga


François Gianviti


Celia Wells and Juanita Elias


Ralph Steinhardt


Olivier de Schutter


David Weissbrodt and Muria Kruger


Mary Rumsey

Reviews

" ..the collected essays are detailed and thoughtful, and provide an excellent overview of an under-theorised area within international law." - The Cambridge Law Journal
 
 
 

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