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Legal Aid Briefing: Lords 3rd reading

Friday, March 23rd, 2012

The Legal Aid, Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders Bill is due to reach its 3rd reading in the House of Lords this week. As it stands the Bill will give irresponsible multi-national corporations which choose to cut corners more power to violate with impunity the rights of poor and vulnerable communities in developing countries.

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Simply Put: Towards an effective UK regime for environmental and social reporting by companies

Monday, May 23rd, 2011

Simply Put provides an expert analysis of how the current legal framework is failing and what changes need to be made to the existing social and environmental corporate reporting regime.  Through smart and straightforward amendments, the report identifies how existing legal requirements could be simplified and streamlined to take the guesswork out of corporate compliance.  

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Implications of the Jackson Civil Costs Reforms for Human Rights Cases against Multinational Corporations

Monday, May 9th, 2011

The UK government has recently proposed wide-ranging reforms to the costs regime for civil litigation following a review by Lord Jackson. The so-called Jackson reforms will significantly restrict the ability of claimants and their lawyers to recover legal costs from defendants. They will have particularly devastating consequences for human rights claims against multinational corporations (MNCs), as they threaten to make such claims economically unviable. This briefing note explains why.

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A Starter for Ten

Thursday, April 21st, 2011

CORE outlines ten of the key issues, opportunities and discussion points on UK business, human rights and the environment over the coming year. The article is based on the premise that there is no single silver bullet to improving UK businesses’ human rights and environmental impacts, so a multi-faceted approach is required.

(April 2011)

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CORE Values: Why the UK Needs a Commission for Business, Human Rights & The Environment

Friday, April 15th, 2011

A new briefing for advocats and activists makes the case for a new body to address the human rights and environmental impacts of UK companies when operating abroad. Based on a detailed review of possible reforms for existing mechanisms, CORE proposes that the Government should create a specialised Commission for Business, Human Rights and the Environment that would have coordinating, capacity-building and informational roles, while also operating as a dispute resolution body.

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Litigation outside the US against MNC human rights violations

Saturday, April 2nd, 2011

Richard Meeran, Partner at Leigh Day & Co, provides an overview of litigation, together with case examples.

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Lines in the Sand: Corporate Accountability, Barmer to Salaya Pipeline

Saturday, April 2nd, 2011

In this report, SCIAF demonstrate the limitations of voluntary CSR initiatives. A case study is presented of human rights violations caused by the operations of a company that works above and beyond the legal minimum CSR standards.

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A Brief History of Social and Environmental Reporting Requirements

Friday, March 18th, 2011

CORE has produced a timeline which summarises recent changes and current debates about UK company non-financial reporting requirements.

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Directors, Human Rights & The Companies Act: Is the new law any different?

Friday, March 18th, 2011

New report finds that The Companies Act 2006 has so far had a limited impact on directors’ duties, human rights and the environment.

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Protecting Rights, Repairing Harm

Thursday, November 11th, 2010

A briefing paper prepared for the UN Secretary General’s Special Representative on Business and Human Rights. This paper outlines how state-based non-judicial mechanisms can help fill gaps in existing frameworks for the protection of human rights of people affected by corporate activities.

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