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Title
Okpabi v Shell and Four Nigerian Farmers v Shell: Parent Company Liability Back in Court |
Full text
https://dspace.library.uu.nl/handle/1874/419818 |
Date
2021 |
Author(s)
Roorda, Lucas; Leader, Daniel |
Contributor(s)
Internationaal recht; UCALL / Aansprakelijkheid en verantwoordelijkheid |
Abstract
Foreign direct liability litigation against businesses is still a growing trend in European domestic courts, going on for over two decades. With absent effective remedies in host states, victims of human rights abuses committed by transnational corporations' subsidiaries try to get access to remedy in the courts of the home states of the parent companies. A crucial factor for whether such cases can succeed, is the viability of the claims against the parent companies allegedly involved in the abuses. The principal legal route that victims have used to hold parent companies liable is through common law negligence claims. |
Subject(s)
duty of care; negligence; Nigeria; Okpabi; parent company; Shell; Business and International Management; Industrial relations; Sociology and Political Science; Law |
Language
en |
Relation
2057-0198 |
Type of publication
Article |
Format
application/pdf |
Rights
info:eu-repo/semantics/OpenAccess |
Identifier
Business and Human Rights Journal 6(2), 368-376 (2021) |
Repository
Utrecht - University of Utrecht
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Added to C-A: 2022-06-23;08:39:52 |
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