Rules for the Global Economy: Synergies Between Voluntary and Binding Approaches
This paper explores the differences, similarities and synergies between voluntary and binding approaches to international rules. Voluntary efforts to ensure that firms adhere to appropriate standards of business conduct have been an important recent development in international business. These efforts have included the publication of codes of conduct describing the nature of a firm’s commitments in such areas as environment, labour, product safety and bribery as well as implementation of specialised management systems designed to help firms honour these commitments. Yet, some NGOs and labour unions question the credibility of these efforts and wonder whether initiatives that do not have the force of law can ever be effective.
This paper notes that all approaches to the social control of business organisations – voluntary and legally binding -- have distinctive shortcomings. These include problems of: credibility arising from imperfect monitoring and enforcement; capture of the control ...
Year of publication: |
1999-11
|
---|---|
Authors: | Gordon, Kathryn |
Institutions: | Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprises Affairs, Organisation de Coopération et de Développement Économiques (OCDE) |
Saved in:
Online Resource
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Environmental Concerns in International Investment Agreements: A Survey
Gordon, Kathryn, (2011)
-
Business Approaches to Combating Bribery: A Study of Codes of Conduct
Gordon, Kathryn, (2000)
-
Deciphering Codes of Corporate Conduct: A Review of their Contents
Gordon, Kathryn, (1999)
- More ...