Publication
Title
Codes of conduct as private legal transplant : the case of European extractive MNEs
Author
Abstract
Corporate social responsibility is a dynamic area that cuts across a multitude of disciplines. This paper combines the notion of Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) with the theory of legal transplant, and claims that Codes of Conduct can be interpreted as proxies of unilateral legal dissemination throughout the entrepreneurial network. By using as example four European extractive Multinational Enterprises (MNEs) (ENI SpA., Total S.A., Repsol YPF, British Petroleum), the article analyses the content of the Codes, the mechanisms and spaces of circulation, and asks questions like whether they are stretching European Union law beyond its traditional boundaries. Exposed to the legal and political relevance of MNEs, the reader is confronted with a global framework characterised by increased complexity, the continuous redefinition of internal and external spaces, deep inconsistencies and unexpressed potential. Therefore, the recognition of the current theoretical weaknesses becomes a fundamental step to critically engage with the production of new legal territories.
Language
English
Source (journal)
European law journal / European University Institute. Academy of European Law [Florence] - Oxford
Publication
Oxford : 2013
ISSN
1351-5993 [print]
1468-0386 [online]
DOI
10.1111/EULJ.12066
Volume/pages
19 :6 (2013) , p. 799-821
ISI
000325154600006
Full text (Publisher's DOI)
UAntwerpen
Publication type
Subject
Law 
External links
Web of Science
Record
Identifier
Creation 21.10.2019
Last edited 05.09.2024
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