Transnational Human Rights Litigation: A Means of Obtaining Effective Remedy Abroad?
Options
BORIS DOI
Publisher DOI
Description
In recent years, various transnational corporations (TNCs) have faced legal proceedings in their home states for human rights violations and environmental damage committed abroad. These transnational lawsuits are an attempt to overcome corporate impunity and establish transnational chains of responsibility. At the same time, the individual legal cases are marked by procedural and legal hurdles and may entail the risk of social costs for claimants. In this article, I explore what such transnational lawsuits can contribute from the perspective of social movements in the Global South. Taking the Monterrico case from Peru as an example, I discuss the expectations of human rights lawyers in such cases and the relevant legal mechanisms. By focusing on out-of-court settlements, I argue that, from the perspective of the Global South actors involved in the case study, adjudication and the related judicial practices are fundamental to making the law effective.
Date of Publication
2020-12
Publication Type
Article
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Additional Credits
Series
Journal of Legal Anthropology
Publisher
Berghahn
ISSN
1758-9584
Access(Rights)
open.access