Beyond International Law: The Role of Multinational Corporations in Reducing the Number of Stateless Children

Despite the proliferation of international law designed to eradicate statelessness, the United Nations estimates there are approximately 12 million stateless individuals worldwide, many of which are the children of migrant workers employed in industries connected with multinational corporations. Ove...

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Main Author: Mark K. Brewer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ubiquity Press 2014-01-01
Series:Tilburg Law Review
Subjects:
Online Access:https://tilburglawreview.com/articles/55
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spelling doaj-e7596db026794b61aa986d9dd6c0a7102020-11-25T01:02:31ZengUbiquity PressTilburg Law Review2211-25452014-01-01191-2647310.1163/22112596-0190200749Beyond International Law: The Role of Multinational Corporations in Reducing the Number of Stateless ChildrenMark K. Brewer0Teaching and Learning Fellow, Northumbria UniversityDespite the proliferation of international law designed to eradicate statelessness, the United Nations estimates there are approximately 12 million stateless individuals worldwide, many of which are the children of migrant workers employed in industries connected with multinational corporations. Over the past few decades, corporate governance codes and corporate social responsibility standards have reoriented to consider a broader range of stakeholders. Against this background, multinational corporations have significant opportunities to raise awareness of the issue of statelessness in the societies in which they operate, to ensure their policies and procedures (and those of their supply chains) minimise the factors that contribute to statelessness, and to assist their employees and those within their supply chains in avoiding statelessness. This paper will explore how multinational corporations may help further the goals of international law seeking to eradicate statelessness while simultaneously developing more sustainable practices toward their employees, local communities, and other stakeholders.https://tilburglawreview.com/articles/55statelesschildrencorporationscorporate governancecorporate social responsibilitysustainability
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mark K. Brewer
spellingShingle Mark K. Brewer
Beyond International Law: The Role of Multinational Corporations in Reducing the Number of Stateless Children
Tilburg Law Review
stateless
children
corporations
corporate governance
corporate social responsibility
sustainability
author_facet Mark K. Brewer
author_sort Mark K. Brewer
title Beyond International Law: The Role of Multinational Corporations in Reducing the Number of Stateless Children
title_short Beyond International Law: The Role of Multinational Corporations in Reducing the Number of Stateless Children
title_full Beyond International Law: The Role of Multinational Corporations in Reducing the Number of Stateless Children
title_fullStr Beyond International Law: The Role of Multinational Corporations in Reducing the Number of Stateless Children
title_full_unstemmed Beyond International Law: The Role of Multinational Corporations in Reducing the Number of Stateless Children
title_sort beyond international law: the role of multinational corporations in reducing the number of stateless children
publisher Ubiquity Press
series Tilburg Law Review
issn 2211-2545
publishDate 2014-01-01
description Despite the proliferation of international law designed to eradicate statelessness, the United Nations estimates there are approximately 12 million stateless individuals worldwide, many of which are the children of migrant workers employed in industries connected with multinational corporations. Over the past few decades, corporate governance codes and corporate social responsibility standards have reoriented to consider a broader range of stakeholders. Against this background, multinational corporations have significant opportunities to raise awareness of the issue of statelessness in the societies in which they operate, to ensure their policies and procedures (and those of their supply chains) minimise the factors that contribute to statelessness, and to assist their employees and those within their supply chains in avoiding statelessness. This paper will explore how multinational corporations may help further the goals of international law seeking to eradicate statelessness while simultaneously developing more sustainable practices toward their employees, local communities, and other stakeholders.
topic stateless
children
corporations
corporate governance
corporate social responsibility
sustainability
url https://tilburglawreview.com/articles/55
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