ABSTRACT

Business and human rights has emerged as a distinct field within the corporate governance movement. The endorsement by the United Nations Human Rights Council of a new set of Guiding Principles for Business and Human Rights in 2011 reinforces the State’s duty to protect against human rights abuses by third parties, including business; the corporate responsibility to respect human rights; and greater access by victims to effective remedy, both judicial and non-judicial.

This book draws on the UN Guiding Principles and recent national plans of action, to provide an overview of relevant developments within the ASEAN region. Bridging theory and practice, the editors have positioned this book at the intersection of human rights risk and its regulation. Chapter authors discuss the implications of key case-studies undertaken across the region and various sectors, with a particular focus on extractive industries, the environment, and infrastructure projects. Topics covered include: due diligence and the role of audits; businesses’ responsibilities to women and children; and the mitigation of human rights risks in the region's emerging markets.

The book sheds light on how stakeholders currently approach business and human rights, and explores how the role of ASEAN States, and that of the institution itself, may be strengthened. In doing so, the book identifies critical challenges and opportunities that lie ahead for the region in relation to business and human rights. This book will be of excellent use and interest to scholars, practitioners and students of human rights, business and company law, international law, and corporate governance.

part |64 pages

Part II

chapter |22 pages

Regulating social and environmental risk in ASEAN financial integration

The Xayaburi dam project in Lao PDR and Thai Banks

chapter |28 pages

Human rights risks amidst the ‘gold-rush'

Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar and Vietnam

part |62 pages

Part III

chapter |27 pages

Tigers, dragons, and elephants on the move in Myanmar

The case for responsible investment and three recommendations for Asian leaders

chapter |17 pages

The new frontier

Due diligence and developing and implementing human rights audits in Southeast Asia

chapter |16 pages

Making human rights a core business practice

The finance sector's role in the promotion and protection of human rights

part |60 pages

Part IV

chapter |14 pages

Rule-making for rights protection in the Philippines

The judiciary's new powers for environmental regulation and access to remedy for business-related rights abuses

chapter |19 pages

The reality of remedy in mining and community relations

An anonymous case-study from Southeast Asia

chapter |25 pages

Right to development

A path to securing more effective remedies?