Heightened Human Rights Due Diligence in Practice: Prohibiting or Facilitating Investment in Conflict Affected Areas?

被引:2
|
作者
Aguirre, Daniel [1 ]
Pietropaoli, Irene [2 ]
机构
[1] Roehampton Univ, Law, London, England
[2] British Inst Int & Comparat Law BIICL, Business & Human Rights, London, England
关键词
business and human rights; human rights due diligence; conflict; Myanmar; UN GUIDING PRINCIPLES; BUSINESS;
D O I
10.1093/jhuman/huad011
中图分类号
D81 [国际关系];
学科分类号
030207 ;
摘要
Companies operating or seeking to invest in conflict-affected areas are expected to carry out a heightened human rights due diligence (HRDD) process to identify, address and mitigate their impact on human rights and the conflict. The heightened HRDD process put forward in the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights and clarified by the UN Working Group constitutes best practice but raises questions regarding implementation. This article explains what heightened HRDD in conflict means in practice. It examines how heightened HRDD expands the business responsibility from identifying and mitigating the impact of its operations on human rights to the impact on the conflict itself. This article draws on lessons from Myanmar, where a military coup in February 2021 caused prominent businesses to leave the country. Would a heightened HRDD process have identified additional risks and discouraged initial investment? Or would it have legitimized investment with a public rights-based, conflict sensitive HRDD process that included a clear exit strategy?
引用
收藏
页码:541 / 558
页数:18
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Corporate Due Diligence and Reporting Requirements for Climate Change and Human Rights
    Studdert, Jacinta
    Govender, Valencia
    Clyde, Johann
    Branguli, Marta Jarque
    Nievas, Sofia
    Silva, Maria Fernanda Roca
    Zhu, Wen
    Diebschlag, Pryderi
    Sassine, Remi
    Cilliers, Wim
    Swart, Kate
    Szuniewicz-Wenzel, Milena
    Hill-Smith, Sarah
    Wolters, Saskia
    Wang, Catherine
    INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY LAW REVIEW, 2023, 25 (3-4) : 333 - 394
  • [32] The Swiss Human Rights Due Diligence Legislation: Between Law and Politics
    Bueno, Nicolas
    Kaufmann, Christine
    BUSINESS AND HUMAN RIGHTS JOURNAL, 2021, 6 (03) : 542 - 549
  • [33] MANDATORY CORPORATE HUMAN RIGHTS DUE DILIGENCE MODELS: SHOOTING BLANKS?
    Rusinova, Vera
    Korotkov, Sergei
    RUSSIAN LAW JOURNAL, 2021, 9 (04) : 33 - 71
  • [34] Mandatory Corporate Due Diligence regarding Human Rights, the Environment and Good Governance?
    Koster, Harold
    EUROPEAN COMPANY LAW, 2020, 17 (06): : 214 - 215
  • [35] Business Actors' Interest in Harder and Softer Regulation of Human Rights Due Diligence
    Lennartz, Benedikt
    NORDIC JOURNAL OF HUMAN RIGHTS, 2023, 41 (03) : 326 - 344
  • [36] Human Rights Due Diligence Within the Arms Industry: Challenges, Practices and Opportunities
    Baydas, Lana
    BUSINESS AND HUMAN RIGHTS JOURNAL, 2025,
  • [37] The climate change dimension of human rights: due diligence and states' positive obligations
    Voigt, Christina
    JOURNAL OF HUMAN RIGHTS AND THE ENVIRONMENT, 2022, 13 : 152 - 171
  • [38] Beyond Human Rights Due Diligence: What Else Do We Need?
    Deva, Surya
    Ramasastry, Anita
    Wettstein, Florian
    BUSINESS AND HUMAN RIGHTS JOURNAL, 2023, 8 (02) : 133 - 134
  • [39] Muddying the Waters: The Concept of a 'Safe Harbour' in Understanding Human Rights Due Diligence
    Smit, Lise
    Bright, Claire
    Neely, Stuart
    BUSINESS AND HUMAN RIGHTS JOURNAL, 2023, 8 (01) : 1 - 17
  • [40] War, Conflict and Human Rights: Theory and Practice
    Morus, Christina M.
    HUMAN RIGHTS QUARTERLY, 2010, 32 (04) : 1051 - 1057