Corporations and international lawmaking:
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
---|---|
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Boston, Mass. [u.a.]
Nijhoff
2007
|
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | Literaturverz. S. 395 - 471 |
Beschreibung: | XX, 508 S. |
ISBN: | 9781571053725 |
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adam_text | TABLE
OF
CONTENTS
Acknowledgments
................................................... xi
About the Author
.................................................... xiii
List of Abbreviations
................................................. xv
Chapter
1:
Introduction
.......................................... 1
A. Terminology
.................................................. 2
B. International Law, Governments and Non-State Actors
................ 4
С
Corporate Contributions to Better Lawmaking
.................... 10
D. Competence and Authority of Non-State Actors in International
Lawmaking
................................................... 15
E. Right and Responsibility of Governments to Regulate
................ 21
F. Outline of Structure and Content
................................. 27
Chapter
2:
Historical Perspective on Corporate Participation
Within the International Legal Order
..................... 29
A. Early Commercial Activity and an Emerging Nation State
............. 29
B. Chartered Trading Companies and the Extension of Colonial Empire.
... 33
1.
Exercising Governmental Powers and Establishing States
......... 35
C. Corporate Consolidation and the Emergence of American
Multinationals
................................................. 40
1.
Emergence of the International Chamber of Commerce and
Intergovernmental Organizations
............................. 41
2.
Extending U.S. Hegemony and Domestic Concern for
Corporate Power
........................................... 43
3.
Historical Observations on the Relationship Between
Commercial and Political Actors Within the International
Legal Order
............................................... 51
D. Corporate Confrontation and Collaboration with the United Nations
.... 52
1.
Intergovernmental Regulatory Initiatives and the UN. Code of
Conduct on Transnational Corporations
........................ 53
2.
Agenda
21
and Non-State Actor Inclusion Within
Intergovernmental Decisionmaking
........................... 58
3.
Novel Forms of Global Governance and the Global Compact
...... 61
4.
Public-Private Partnerships and the
2002
World Summit on
Sustainable Development
.................................... 63
VI
Corporations and International Lawmaking
E. Contemporary Modalities for Corporate Participation Within the
UN. System
..................................................
65
1.
Non-State Actor Relations with UN. Organs and Specialized
Agencies
.................................................
2.
Non-State Actor Relations with International Economic
Institutions
...............................................
3.
Ambit of Corporate Relationships with the United Nations:
Examples of Standardsetting, Program Implementation
and Public Procurement
..................................... 79
4.
Efforts to Harmonize Secretariat Practices in Their Operational
Dealings with Corporations
.................................. 83
5.
Observations on the U.N. s Relationship with Corporations
........ 87
F. Conclusions
.................................................. 88
Chapter
3:
Corporate Contributions to Customary International
Law and Soft International Law
....................... 91
A. Corporate Role in Customary International Law
..................... 91
1.
Normative Creation
........................................ 92
a. Normative Affirmation: Contractual Principles
............... 97
b. Accretions to Existing Customary Rules: Corporate
(Non-)Intervention in the Internal Affairs of States
............ 97
2.
Implementing and Applying Customary Norms
.................. 100
a. Foreign Direct Investment as an Inducement to National
Standardsetting
......................................... 101
b. Corporations as Conduits for National Standards
............. 104
с
Commercial Roles when Implementing Human Rights
Standards and the Regulatory Responsibilities of Government
.... 105
d. Resisting Prohibitions Under Customary International Law:
Illustration of South African Apartheid
...................... 113
3.
Challenging Norms that Maintain International Legal Order:
Prohibition on the Use of Force
.............................. 116
B. Corporate Participation in Developing Soft Legal Instruments
....... 122
1.
Corporate Participation in Intergovernmental
Codes of Conduct
.......................................... 123
a. Interpretative Function and Institutional Oversight
Responsibility
.......................................... 124
b. Maintaining Corporate Compliance Through
Continuous Review
...................................... 126
с
Impact of Intergovernmental Codes on Corporate Behavior:
Towards Human Rights Norms for Business
................. 128
2.
Corporate Standardsetting Activity
............................ 135
a. International Organization for Standardization
............... 136
b. Corporate Voluntary Initiatives as an International Legal
Process
.............................................. 139
Tahle
of Contents
vii
с.
Corporate
Voluntary Initiatives as Platforms for Influencing
Regulation
............................................. 144
C. Conclusions
.................................................. 147
Chapter
4:
Corporate Contributions to Treaty Formation and
Implementation
....................................... 149
A. Illustrations of Corporate Participation in Treaty Negotiations
......... 149
1.
Law of the Sea
............................................ 152
2.
Convention on Biological Diversity
........................... 153
3.
Chemical Weapons
......................................... 154
4.
International Trade Agreements
.............................. 155
5.
Investment Protection Agreements
............................ 159
6.
Bribing Foreign Government Officials
......................... 160
7.
Anti-Competitive Behavior
.................................. 161
8.
Tobacco Advertising
....................................... 162
9.
Observations
.............................................. 163
B. Corporate Contributions to Protecting the Ozone Layer and
Preventing Climate Change
...................................... 165
1.
Ozone Layer Protection as a Transatlantic Commercial Dispute
.... 166
2.
Climate Change and Facilitating Corporate Adaptation
........... 169
3.
Technology Transfer and the Position of Developing States
........ 171
4.
Corporate Contributions to a Conference of the Parties to the
UNFCCC
................................................ 172
a. Principal Actors
......................................... 173
i. International Chamber of Commerce
................... 173
ii. Trade Associations
.................................. 174
iii.
Corporate Coalitions
................................. 175
b. Principal Activities
...................................... 175
i. Access to Meetings
.................................. 175
ii. Assisting Oral Interventions by Governments
............ 176
iii.
Oral Interventions by Non-State Actors at the Conclusion
of Plenary Sessions
.................................. 176
iv.
Membership of and Advice to National Delegations
....... 177
v. BINGO Meetings
................................... 178
vi.
Roundtables
........................................ 179
vii.
Workshops
......................................... 179
viii.
Information Gathering
............................... 179
ix.
Information Dissemination
............................ 180
x. Influencing Decisionmaking Under the Clean
Development Mechanism (CDM)
...................... 182
xi.
Furthering Emissions Trading
......................... 183
xii.
Continuing the Technological Development
Debate
............................................ 185
xiii.
Providing Assurances of Compliance
................... 186
xiv.
Supporting the UNFCCC Secretariat
................... 187
VIII
Corporations
and International Lawmaking
xv.
Organizing Side Events
.............................. 188
xvi.
Informal Activities
.................................. 189
5.
Corporate Attempts to Influence the Participatory Conditions
...... 189
С
Role of Non-State Actors in Defining Their Participatory Modalities
----- 194
1.
International Conferences Under U.N. Auspices and
World Summits
............................................ 196
a. Environmental Protection and Sustainable Development
........ 196
b. International Protection of Human Rights
................... 200
2.
U.N. General Assembly Special Sessions
....................... 202
D. Procedural Rules Applicable to U.N. Conferences
.................... 204
1.
Prior Accreditation Procedures
............................... 205
2.
Procedural Rules
.......................................... 207
a. Oral Interventions
....................................... 209
b. Written Submissions
..................................... 210
3.
Emergent Right for Non-State Actors to Participate at
Intergovernmental Conferences
............................... 211
a. Scope and Content of an Emergent Right of Participation for
Non-State Actors
........................................ 213
E. Corporate Impact on Intergovernmental Treaty Negotiations
........... 216
1.
Motivations for Corporate Participation
........................ 218
2.
Procedural Challenges for Business Engagement
................ 220
3.
Assessing Corporate Influences on Substantive Outcomes
......... 223
F. Corporate Contributions to Treaty Implementation
................... 225
G. Conclusions
.................................................. 232
Chapter
5:
Corporations and International Dispute Settlement
........... 235
A. Corporate Enforcement Function: Self-interested and Selective
........ 235
B. Range of Dispute Resolution Models Available to Corporations
........ 238
1.
Recourse to National Courts: South African Pharmaceutical
Litigation
................................................ 239
2.
Diplomatic Protection Model
................................ 242
a. Authoritatively Establishing Property Rights Through the
International Court of Justice
.............................. 242
b. Removing Trade Impediments Through the World Trade
Organization
........................................... 245
i. Corporate Perspectives and the Amicus Brief
Controversy
........................................ 248
ii. Assessment of Corporate Participation Within the WTO.
... 264
с
Limitations of the Diplomatic Protection Model
.............. 267
3.
Direct Arbitral Action Against Governments to Protect
Property Rights
........................................... 268
a. Bilateral Investment Treaties and ICSID
..................... 269
b. North American Free Trade Agreement
...................... 271
Table
of Contents
ix
і.
Chapter
11
(Investor-Government Dispute Settlement
Concerning Property Rghts)
.......................... 271
ii. Amicus Curiae Submissions Under Chapter
11........... 273
iii.
Chapter
19
(Review of Final Anti-Dumping and
Countervailing Duty Determinations)
................... 275
iv.
Chapter
20
(Intergovernmental Dispute Settlement)
....... 275
v. Environmental and Labor Cooperation Side Agreements
... 276
vi.
Observations on Corporate Contributions Under
NAFTA
........................................... 277
4.
Enforcement Within the Operational Framework of
Intergovernmental Organizations
............................. 281
a. Enforcing Unilateral and Multilateral Economic Sanctions
..... 282
b. Initiating Claims Before the U.N. Compensation Commission
... 286
с
Enforcing Labor and Environmental Standards
............... 288
5.
Prospects for Enforcement Within the Private Sphere
............. 291
C. Corporate Forum Shopping and Proliferating International Tribunals
.... 293
D. Characterizing Corporate Roles: Dismantling Legislation,
Constraining National Regulatory Capacity or Action Incidental to
Regulatory Evolution?
.......................................... 296
E. Conclusions
.................................................. 304
Chapter
6:
Conclusions
........................................... 305
A. Assessment of Corporate Contributions to International Lawmaking
.... 305
1.
Assessing the Arguments for and Against Corporate
Participation
.............................................. 308
2.
Commercial Practices and International Regulatory
Development
.............................................. 310
3.
Evidence of Corporate Consciousness Within International
Legal Processes
........................................... 313
B. Position of Corporations Within the International Legal Order
......... 320
1.
Terms of Non-State Actor Participation in International
Lawmaking
............................................... 325
2.
Non-State Actor Contributions to (Undemocratic International
Legal Processes
........................................... 330
3.
Corporate Relationships with
NGOs
and Developing Country
Governments
.............................................. 335
С
Corporate Roles and Regulatory Lacunae
.......................... 337
D. Final Remarks
................................................. 345
Annexes
........................................................... 347
A. Procedural Rules for U.N. Organs
............................... 347
B. Illustrations from Intergovernmental Organizations
................. 354
C. Comparative Table
ofinformation
Required for Accreditation
......... 356
D. Accreditation Procedures to U.N. Conferences
..................... 357
x
Corporations
and International Lawmaking
E. Procedural Rules for Conferences of the Parties (COPs) and
Other Governing Bodies for International Environmental Treaties
..... 361
F
Comparative Rules of Procedure Defining the Modalities for
NGO
Participation at U.N. Conferences, World Summits and U.N.
General Assembly Special Sessions
.............................. 367
G. Modalities for
NGO
Participation in the U.N. Framework Convention
on Climate Change
........................................... 377
H. Proposal by Business for a Business Consultative Mechanism
........ 380
/.
The WTO
s
Treatment ofAmicus Briefs Submitted by Industry
......... 381
J. Proposed Amendments to the WTO Dispute Settlement
Understanding
............................................... 384
K. Amicus Submissions to International Criminal Courts and Tribunals
..... 391
L. Regulating the Lobbying of European Parliamentarians
............. 392
Bibliography
...................................................... 395
Table of Cases
...................................................... 473
Table of Instruments
................................................. 487
Index
........................................................... 499
|
adam_txt |
TABLE
OF
CONTENTS
Acknowledgments
. xi
About the Author
. xiii
List of Abbreviations
. xv
Chapter
1:
Introduction
. 1
A. Terminology
. 2
B. International Law, Governments and Non-State Actors
. 4
С
Corporate Contributions to "Better Lawmaking"
. 10
D. Competence and Authority of Non-State Actors in International
Lawmaking
. 15
E. Right and Responsibility of Governments to Regulate
. 21
F. Outline of Structure and Content
. 27
Chapter
2:
Historical Perspective on Corporate Participation
Within the International Legal Order
. 29
A. Early Commercial Activity and an Emerging Nation State
. 29
B. Chartered Trading Companies and the Extension of Colonial Empire.
. 33
1.
Exercising Governmental Powers and Establishing States
. 35
C. Corporate Consolidation and the Emergence of American
Multinationals
. 40
1.
Emergence of the International Chamber of Commerce and
Intergovernmental Organizations
. 41
2.
Extending U.S. Hegemony and Domestic Concern for
Corporate Power
. 43
3.
Historical Observations on the Relationship Between
Commercial and Political Actors Within the International
Legal Order
. 51
D. Corporate Confrontation and Collaboration with the United Nations
. 52
1.
Intergovernmental Regulatory Initiatives and the UN. Code of
Conduct on Transnational Corporations
. 53
2.
Agenda
21
and Non-State Actor Inclusion Within
Intergovernmental Decisionmaking
. 58
3.
Novel Forms of Global Governance and the Global Compact
. 61
4.
Public-Private Partnerships and the
2002
World Summit on
Sustainable Development
. 63
VI
Corporations and International Lawmaking
E. Contemporary Modalities for Corporate Participation Within the
UN. System
.
65
1.
Non-State Actor Relations with UN. Organs and Specialized
Agencies
. " '
2.
Non-State Actor Relations with International Economic
Institutions
. '"
3.
Ambit of Corporate Relationships with the United Nations:
Examples of Standardsetting, Program Implementation
and Public Procurement
. 79
4.
Efforts to Harmonize Secretariat Practices in Their Operational
Dealings with Corporations
. 83
5.
Observations on the U.N.'s Relationship with Corporations
. 87
F. Conclusions
. 88
Chapter
3:
Corporate Contributions to Customary International
Law and "Soft" International Law
. 91
A. Corporate Role in Customary International Law
. 91
1.
Normative Creation
. 92
a. Normative Affirmation: Contractual Principles
. 97
b. Accretions to Existing Customary Rules: Corporate
(Non-)Intervention in the Internal Affairs of States
. 97
2.
Implementing and Applying Customary Norms
. 100
a. Foreign Direct Investment as an Inducement to National
Standardsetting
. 101
b. Corporations as Conduits for National Standards
. 104
с
Commercial Roles when Implementing Human Rights
Standards and the Regulatory Responsibilities of Government
. 105
d. Resisting Prohibitions Under Customary International Law:
Illustration of South African Apartheid
. 113
3.
Challenging Norms that Maintain International Legal Order:
Prohibition on the Use of Force
. 116
B. Corporate Participation in Developing "Soft" Legal Instruments
. 122
1.
Corporate Participation in Intergovernmental
Codes of Conduct
. 123
a. Interpretative Function and Institutional Oversight
Responsibility
. 124
b. Maintaining Corporate Compliance Through
Continuous Review
. 126
с
Impact of Intergovernmental Codes on Corporate Behavior:
Towards Human Rights Norms for Business
. 128
2.
Corporate Standardsetting Activity
. 135
a. International Organization for Standardization
. 136
b. Corporate Voluntary Initiatives as an International Legal
Process
. 139
Tahle
of Contents
vii
с.
Corporate
Voluntary Initiatives as Platforms for Influencing
Regulation
. 144
C. Conclusions
. 147
Chapter
4:
Corporate Contributions to Treaty Formation and
Implementation
. 149
A. Illustrations of Corporate Participation in Treaty Negotiations
. 149
1.
Law of the Sea
. 152
2.
Convention on Biological Diversity
. 153
3.
Chemical Weapons
. 154
4.
International Trade Agreements
. 155
5.
Investment Protection Agreements
. 159
6.
Bribing Foreign Government Officials
. 160
7.
Anti-Competitive Behavior
. 161
8.
Tobacco Advertising
. 162
9.
Observations
. 163
B. Corporate Contributions to Protecting the Ozone Layer and
Preventing Climate Change
. 165
1.
Ozone Layer Protection as a Transatlantic Commercial Dispute
. 166
2.
Climate Change and Facilitating Corporate Adaptation
. 169
3.
Technology Transfer and the Position of Developing States
. 171
4.
Corporate Contributions to a Conference of the Parties to the
UNFCCC
. 172
a. Principal Actors
. 173
i. International Chamber of Commerce
. 173
ii. Trade Associations
. 174
iii.
Corporate Coalitions
. 175
b. Principal Activities
. 175
i. Access to Meetings
. 175
ii. Assisting Oral Interventions by Governments
. 176
iii.
Oral Interventions by Non-State Actors at the Conclusion
of Plenary Sessions
. 176
iv.
Membership of and Advice to National Delegations
. 177
v. BINGO Meetings
. 178
vi.
Roundtables
. 179
vii.
Workshops
. 179
viii.
Information Gathering
. 179
ix.
Information Dissemination
. 180
x. Influencing Decisionmaking Under the Clean
Development Mechanism (CDM)
. 182
xi.
Furthering Emissions Trading
. 183
xii.
Continuing the Technological Development
Debate
. 185
xiii.
Providing Assurances of Compliance
. 186
xiv.
Supporting the UNFCCC Secretariat
. 187
VIII
Corporations
and International Lawmaking
xv.
Organizing Side Events
. 188
xvi.
Informal Activities
. 189
5.
Corporate Attempts to Influence the Participatory Conditions
. 189
С
Role of Non-State Actors in Defining Their Participatory Modalities
----- 194
1.
International Conferences Under U.N. Auspices and
World Summits
. 196
a. Environmental Protection and Sustainable Development
. 196
b. International Protection of Human Rights
. 200
2.
U.N. General Assembly Special Sessions
. 202
D. Procedural Rules Applicable to U.N. Conferences
. 204
1.
Prior Accreditation Procedures
. 205
2.
Procedural Rules
. 207
a. Oral Interventions
. 209
b. Written Submissions
. 210
3.
Emergent Right for Non-State Actors to Participate at
Intergovernmental Conferences
. 211
a. Scope and Content of an Emergent Right of Participation for
Non-State Actors
. 213
E. Corporate Impact on Intergovernmental Treaty Negotiations
. 216
1.
Motivations for Corporate Participation
. 218
2.
Procedural Challenges for Business Engagement
. 220
3.
Assessing Corporate Influences on Substantive Outcomes
. 223
F. Corporate Contributions to Treaty Implementation
. 225
G. Conclusions
. 232
Chapter
5:
Corporations and International Dispute Settlement
. 235
A. Corporate Enforcement Function: Self-interested and Selective
. 235
B. Range of Dispute Resolution Models Available to Corporations
. 238
1.
Recourse to National Courts: South African Pharmaceutical
Litigation
. 239
2.
Diplomatic Protection Model
. 242
a. Authoritatively Establishing Property Rights Through the
International Court of Justice
. 242
b. Removing Trade Impediments Through the World Trade
Organization
. 245
i. Corporate Perspectives and the Amicus Brief
Controversy
. 248
ii. Assessment of Corporate Participation Within the WTO.
. 264
с
Limitations of the Diplomatic Protection Model
. 267
3.
Direct Arbitral Action Against Governments to Protect
Property Rights
. 268
a. Bilateral Investment Treaties and ICSID
. 269
b. North American Free Trade Agreement
. 271
Table
of Contents
ix
і.
Chapter
11
(Investor-Government Dispute Settlement
Concerning Property Rghts)
. 271
ii. Amicus Curiae Submissions Under Chapter
11. 273
iii.
Chapter
19
(Review of Final Anti-Dumping and
Countervailing Duty Determinations)
. 275
iv.
Chapter
20
(Intergovernmental Dispute Settlement)
. 275
v. Environmental and Labor Cooperation Side Agreements
. 276
vi.
Observations on Corporate Contributions Under
NAFTA
. 277
4.
Enforcement Within the Operational Framework of
Intergovernmental Organizations
. 281
a. Enforcing Unilateral and Multilateral Economic Sanctions
. 282
b. Initiating Claims Before the U.N. Compensation Commission
. 286
с
Enforcing Labor and Environmental Standards
. 288
5.
Prospects for Enforcement Within the Private Sphere
. 291
C. Corporate Forum Shopping and Proliferating International Tribunals
. 293
D. Characterizing Corporate Roles: Dismantling Legislation,
Constraining National Regulatory Capacity or Action Incidental to
Regulatory Evolution?
. 296
E. Conclusions
. 304
Chapter
6:
Conclusions
. 305
A. Assessment of Corporate Contributions to International Lawmaking
. 305
1.
Assessing the Arguments for and Against Corporate
Participation
. 308
2.
Commercial Practices and International Regulatory
Development
. 310
3.
Evidence of Corporate Consciousness Within International
Legal Processes
. 313
B. Position of Corporations Within the International Legal Order
. 320
1.
Terms of Non-State Actor Participation in International
Lawmaking
. 325
2.
Non-State Actor Contributions to (Undemocratic International
Legal Processes
. 330
3.
Corporate Relationships with
NGOs
and Developing Country
Governments
. 335
С
Corporate Roles and Regulatory Lacunae
. 337
D. Final Remarks
. 345
Annexes
. 347
A. Procedural Rules for U.N. Organs
. 347
B. Illustrations from Intergovernmental Organizations
. 354
C. Comparative Table
ofinformation
Required for Accreditation
. 356
D. Accreditation Procedures to U.N. Conferences
. 357
x
Corporations
and International Lawmaking
E. Procedural Rules for Conferences of the Parties (COPs) and
Other Governing Bodies for International Environmental Treaties
. 361
F
Comparative Rules of Procedure Defining the Modalities for
NGO
Participation at U.N. Conferences, World Summits and U.N.
General Assembly Special Sessions
. 367
G. Modalities for
NGO
Participation in the U.N. Framework Convention
on Climate Change
. 377
H. Proposal by Business for a Business Consultative Mechanism
. 380
/.
The WTO
s
Treatment ofAmicus Briefs Submitted by Industry
. 381
J. Proposed Amendments to the WTO Dispute Settlement
Understanding
. 384
K. Amicus Submissions to International Criminal Courts and Tribunals
. 391
L. Regulating the Lobbying of European Parliamentarians
. 392
Bibliography
. 395
Table of Cases
. 473
Table of Instruments
. 487
Index
. 499 |
any_adam_object | 1 |
any_adam_object_boolean | 1 |
author | Tully, Stephen |
author_facet | Tully, Stephen |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Tully, Stephen |
author_variant | s t st |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV022654714 |
classification_rvk | PR 2180 PR 2207 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)237025264 (DE-599)BVBBV022654714 |
dewey-full | 341 |
dewey-hundreds | 300 - Social sciences |
dewey-ones | 341 - Law of nations |
dewey-raw | 341 |
dewey-search | 341 |
dewey-sort | 3341 |
dewey-tens | 340 - Law |
discipline | Rechtswissenschaft |
discipline_str_mv | Rechtswissenschaft |
format | Book |
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id | DE-604.BV022654714 |
illustrated | Not Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-02T18:22:45Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T21:02:41Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9781571053725 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-015860666 |
oclc_num | 237025264 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-M382 DE-12 DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-384 DE-29 DE-188 |
owner_facet | DE-M382 DE-12 DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-384 DE-29 DE-188 |
physical | XX, 508 S. |
publishDate | 2007 |
publishDateSearch | 2007 |
publishDateSort | 2007 |
publisher | Nijhoff |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Tully, Stephen Verfasser aut Corporations and international lawmaking Stephen Tully Boston, Mass. [u.a.] Nijhoff 2007 XX, 508 S. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Literaturverz. S. 395 - 471 Internationales Recht (DE-588)4027447-0 gnd rswk-swf Multinationales Unternehmen (DE-588)4075092-9 gnd rswk-swf Völkerrecht (DE-588)4063693-8 gnd rswk-swf Einflussnahme (DE-588)4131701-4 gnd rswk-swf Nichtstaatliche Organisation (DE-588)4131014-7 gnd rswk-swf Rechtsetzung (DE-588)4048786-6 gnd rswk-swf Gesetzgebung (DE-588)4020682-8 gnd rswk-swf Organisation (DE-588)4043774-7 gnd rswk-swf Organisation (DE-588)4043774-7 s Internationales Recht (DE-588)4027447-0 s Gesetzgebung (DE-588)4020682-8 s Nichtstaatliche Organisation (DE-588)4131014-7 s DE-604 Völkerrecht (DE-588)4063693-8 s Rechtsetzung (DE-588)4048786-6 s Multinationales Unternehmen (DE-588)4075092-9 s Einflussnahme (DE-588)4131701-4 s Digitalisierung UB Regensburg application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=015860666&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Tully, Stephen Corporations and international lawmaking Internationales Recht (DE-588)4027447-0 gnd Multinationales Unternehmen (DE-588)4075092-9 gnd Völkerrecht (DE-588)4063693-8 gnd Einflussnahme (DE-588)4131701-4 gnd Nichtstaatliche Organisation (DE-588)4131014-7 gnd Rechtsetzung (DE-588)4048786-6 gnd Gesetzgebung (DE-588)4020682-8 gnd Organisation (DE-588)4043774-7 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4027447-0 (DE-588)4075092-9 (DE-588)4063693-8 (DE-588)4131701-4 (DE-588)4131014-7 (DE-588)4048786-6 (DE-588)4020682-8 (DE-588)4043774-7 |
title | Corporations and international lawmaking |
title_auth | Corporations and international lawmaking |
title_exact_search | Corporations and international lawmaking |
title_exact_search_txtP | Corporations and international lawmaking |
title_full | Corporations and international lawmaking Stephen Tully |
title_fullStr | Corporations and international lawmaking Stephen Tully |
title_full_unstemmed | Corporations and international lawmaking Stephen Tully |
title_short | Corporations and international lawmaking |
title_sort | corporations and international lawmaking |
topic | Internationales Recht (DE-588)4027447-0 gnd Multinationales Unternehmen (DE-588)4075092-9 gnd Völkerrecht (DE-588)4063693-8 gnd Einflussnahme (DE-588)4131701-4 gnd Nichtstaatliche Organisation (DE-588)4131014-7 gnd Rechtsetzung (DE-588)4048786-6 gnd Gesetzgebung (DE-588)4020682-8 gnd Organisation (DE-588)4043774-7 gnd |
topic_facet | Internationales Recht Multinationales Unternehmen Völkerrecht Einflussnahme Nichtstaatliche Organisation Rechtsetzung Gesetzgebung Organisation |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=015860666&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT tullystephen corporationsandinternationallawmaking |