
Modern corporations are key participants in the new globalized economy. As such, they have been accorded tremendous latitude and granted extensive rights. However, accompanying obligations have not been similarly forthcoming. Chief among them is the obligation not to commit atrocities or human rights abuses in the pursuit of profit.Multinational corporations are increasingly complicit in genocides that occur in the developing world. While they benefit enormously from the crime, they are immune from prosecution at the international level. Prosecuting Corporations for Genocide proposes new legal pathways to ensure such companies are held criminally liable for their conduct by creating a framework for international criminal jurisdiction. If a state or a person commits genocide, they are punished, and international law demands such. Nevertheless, corporate actors have successfully avoided this through an array of legal arguments which Professor Kelly challenges. He demonstrates how international criminal jurisdiction should be extended over corporations for complicity in genocide and makes the case that it should be done promptly.
This book investigates the legal vacuum that allows multinational corporations to escape international prosecution for complicity in genocide. Professor Michael J. Kelly, an expert in international law, examines the current limitations of global legal frameworks that grant corporations extensive rights without corresponding criminal accountability. He argues that the existing immunity enjoyed by corporate entities is legally inconsistent with the treatment of states and individuals, proposing a new framework to extend international criminal jurisdiction to these actors.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Legal scholars and practitioners view this work as a significant contribution to the discourse on corporate accountability in international law. Experts highlight the text for its rigorous challenge to the status quo and its clear articulation of necessary legal reforms.
Page Count:
280
Publication Date:
2016-03-18
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190238895
ISBN-13:
9780190238896
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