This book undertakes a specialised analysis of a topic that is highly significant both theoretically and practically. At the theoretical level, it discusses questions that have remained insufficiently answered in the fields of international human rights and institutional law. Notably, it clarifies how international human rights law conditions member states' governance role within international financial institutions and how this role is to be accommodated in the regime of international responsibility. Furthermore, the book's thorough discussion of member states' human rights due diligence duties offers a practical contribution to the understanding of what tools may be used by states to secure their human rights obligations when participating in international financial institutions. Its practical significance also relates to the examination of the various elements that must be demonstrated by an individual wishing to invoke member State responsibility for alleged human rights violations in the context of international financial institution operations.
Tuesday, July 30, 2019
Barros: Governance As Responsibility: Member States As Human Rights Protectors in International Financial Institutions
Ana Sofia Barros has published Governance As Responsibility: Member States As Human Rights Protectors in International Financial Institutions (Cambridge Univ. Press 2019). Here's the abstract: