Fr. 156.00

States, Firms, and Their Legal Fictions - Attributing Identity and Responsibility to Artificial Entities

English · Hardback

Shipping usually within 3 to 5 weeks

Description

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"Corporations and states are creatures of law that claim rights, trade roles, and avoid responsibility based on legal concepts in international and domestic law. Using the concept of "attribution" as a touchstone, this cross-disciplinary book explores the law's diverse ways of constructing the identities and responsibilities of firms and states"--

List of contents










Introduction; 1. States, Firms, and their Legal Fictions Melissa J. Durkee; Part I. International Attribution: 2. Attribution in International Law: Challenges and Evolution Kristen E. Boon; 3. Between States and Firms: Attribution and the Construction of the Shareholder State Mikko Rajavuori; 4. Contractors and Hybrid Warfare: A Pluralist Approach to Reforming the Law of State Responsibility Laura Dickinson; 5. The Enduring Charter: Corporations, States, and International Law Doreen Lustig; Part II. Transnational Attribution: 6. Corporate Structures and the Attribution Dilemma in Multinational Enterprises James T. Gathii and Olabisi D. Akinkugbe; 7. Transnational Blame Attribution: The Limits of Using Reputational Sanctions to Punish Corporate Misconduct Kishanthi Parella; 8. Mind the Agency Gap in Corporate Social Responsibility Dalia Palombo; Part III. Domestic Attribution: 9. To Whom Should We Attribute A Corporation's Speech? Sarah C. Haan; 10. What is a Corporate Mind? Mental State Attribution Benjamin P. Edwards; 11. Who is a Corporation? Attributing the Moral Might of the Corporate Form Catherine A. Hardee; Part IV. Conceptual Origins and Lineages: 12. The Juridical Person of the State: Origins and Implications David Ciepley; 13. Corporate Personhood as Legal and Literary Fiction Joshua Barkan.

About the author

Melissa J. Durkee is Professor at Washington University School of Law. She is an expert in international and business law and her research focuses on the public-private interactions that produce and interpret legal norms. She is an elected member of the American Journal of International Law and chairs the International Legal Theory interest group of the American Society of International Law. Her work appears in leading journals including the Yale Law Journal, Stanford Law Review, Virginia Law Review, and others.

Summary

Corporations and states are creatures of law that claim rights, trade roles, and avoid responsibility based on legal concepts in international and domestic law. Using the concept of “attribution” as a touchstone, this cross-disciplinary book explores the law's diverse ways of constructing the identities and responsibilities of firms and states.

Foreword

This cross-disciplinary book explores the law's diverse ways of constructing the identities and responsibilities of firms and states.

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