I am delighted to announce that a marvelous collection of essays, edited by Judith Schönsteiner (Universidad Diego Portales, Chile) and Markus Krajewski (University of Erlangen-Nürnberg), Human Rights and Environmental Sustainability in State-Owned Enterprises (Routledge, 2024) is now available for pre-order. The publisher description gives a good sense of the focus of the essays:
This book presents case studies on the human rights performance of state-owned enterprises from four Latin American and three European countries, as well as foreign investments by Chinese state-owned enterprises on these continents. State-owned enterprises are considered among some of the worst perpetrators of contamination and corporate human rights violations around the globe, both domestically and abroad. This volume examines whether companies implement the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights and how their state owners regulate or incentivize their human rights compliance. Studies cover different sectors ranging from finance to extractives and air transport in Brazil, Chile, China, Ecuador, Finland, France, Germany, and Mexico and allow contrasts between companies from countries with different degrees of human rights regulation, including due diligence and supply chain laws. The work shows that states are rather hesitant to implement the UN Guiding Principles “leading by example.” The book will be essential reading for academics, researchers, and policy-makers working in the areas of international human rights law, comparative administrative law, and corporate social responsibility.
Essays include:
1. Introduction (Judith Schönsteiner and Markus Krajewski)
2. PEMEX and human rights: A case study of Mexico’s largest state-owned enterprise (Humberto Cantú Rivera)
3. Human rights and environmental sustainability in the Ecuadorian National Mining Company ENAMI EP (María José Luque Macías)
4. Regulation of state-owned enterprises (SOE) in Brazil in relation to human rights (Victória Vitti de Laurentiz and Danielle Anne Pamplona)
5. Chile: Due diligence and financial inclusion policies in the state-owned Banco Estado (Macarena Contreras Soto, Francisco Sánchez Lay and Judith Schönsteiner)
6. State-owned enterprises and human rights in Finland (Mikko Rajavuori and Juho Saloranta)
7. Human rights responsibilities of state-owned companies in Germany: Development cooperation and sustainability financing as case studies (Markus Krajewski and Tina Brosi)
8. A review of the regulatory framework relating to human rights and environmental concerns for state-owned enterprises in France(Mihaela Maria Barnes)
9. Chinese state-owned companies and investment in Latin America and Europe (Larry Catá Backer (白 轲))
10. Preliminary conclusions and prospects for further research (Judith Schönsteiner and Markus Krajewski)
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