Making Sovereign Financing and Human Rights Work
Title | Making Sovereign Financing and Human Rights Work PDF eBook |
Author | Juan Pablo Bohoslavsky |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
Pages | 392 |
Release | 2014-12-01 |
Genre | Law |
ISBN | 1782253939 |
Poor public resource management and the global financial crisis curbing fundamental fiscal space, millions thrown into poverty, and authoritarian regimes running successful criminal campaigns with the help of financial assistance are all phenomena that raise fundamental questions around finance and human rights. They also highlight the urgent need for more systematic and robust legal and economic thinking about sovereign finance and human rights. This edited collection aims to contribute to filling this gap by introducing novel legal theories and analyses of the links between sovereign debt and human rights from a variety of perspectives. These chapters include studies of financial complicity, UN sanctions, ethics, transitional justice, criminal law, insolvency proceedings, millennium development goals, global financial architecture, corporations, extraterritoriality, state of necessity, sovereign wealth and hedge funds, project financing, state responsibility, international financial institutions, the right to development, UN initiatives, litigation, as well as case studies from Africa, Asia and Latin America. These chapters are then theorised by the editors in an introductory chapter. In July 2012 the UN Human Rights Council finally issued its own guidelines on foreign debt and human rights, yet much remains to be done to promote better understanding of the legal and economic implications of the interface between finance and human rights. This book will contribute to that understanding as well as help practitioners in their everyday work. The authors include world-renowned lawyers and economists, experienced practitioners and officials from international organisations.
Making Sovereign Financing and Human Rights Work
Title | Making Sovereign Financing and Human Rights Work PDF eBook |
Author | Juan Pablo Bohoslavsky |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
Pages | 601 |
Release | 2014-12-01 |
Genre | Law |
ISBN | 1782253947 |
Poor public resource management and the global financial crisis curbing fundamental fiscal space, millions thrown into poverty, and authoritarian regimes running successful criminal campaigns with the help of financial assistance are all phenomena that raise fundamental questions around finance and human rights. They also highlight the urgent need for more systematic and robust legal and economic thinking about sovereign finance and human rights. This edited collection aims to contribute to filling this gap by introducing novel legal theories and analyses of the links between sovereign debt and human rights from a variety of perspectives. These chapters include studies of financial complicity, UN sanctions, ethics, transitional justice, criminal law, insolvency proceedings, millennium development goals, global financial architecture, corporations, extraterritoriality, state of necessity, sovereign wealth and hedge funds, project financing, state responsibility, international financial institutions, the right to development, UN initiatives, litigation, as well as case studies from Africa, Asia and Latin America. These chapters are then theorised by the editors in an introductory chapter. In July 2012 the UN Human Rights Council finally issued its own guidelines on foreign debt and human rights, yet much remains to be done to promote better understanding of the legal and economic implications of the interface between finance and human rights. This book will contribute to that understanding as well as help practitioners in their everyday work. The authors include world-renowned lawyers and economists, experienced practitioners and officials from international organisations.
Sovereign Debt and Human Rights
Title | Sovereign Debt and Human Rights PDF eBook |
Author | Ilias Bantekas |
Publisher | |
Pages | 641 |
Release | 2018 |
Genre | Business & Economics |
ISBN | 019881044X |
Sovereign debt is necessary for states to function, yet its impact on human rights is underexplored. Bantekas and Lumina gather experts to conclude that imposing structural adjustment programmes exacerbates debt, injures the entrenched rights of peoples and their state's economic sovereignty, and worsens the borrower's economic situation.
Sovereign Debt and Socio-Economic Rights Beyond Crisis
Title | Sovereign Debt and Socio-Economic Rights Beyond Crisis PDF eBook |
Author | Emma Luce Scali |
Publisher | Cambridge University Press |
Pages | 217 |
Release | 2022-02-24 |
Genre | Law |
ISBN | 1108494005 |
Argues that the 'neoliberalisation' of international and EU law has been advanced in the wake of the Eurozone debt crisis.
Sovereign Debt and Human Rights
Title | Sovereign Debt and Human Rights PDF eBook |
Author | Ilias Bantekas |
Publisher | Oxford University Press |
Pages | 828 |
Release | 2018-11-15 |
Genre | Law |
ISBN | 0192538438 |
Sovereign debt is necessary for the functioning of many modern states, yet its impact on human rights is underexplored in academic literature. This volume provides the reader with a step-by-step analysis of the debt phenomenon and how it affects human rights. Beginning by setting out the historical, political and economic context of sovereign debt, the book goes on to address the human rights dimension of the policies and activities of the three types of sovereign lenders: international financial institutions (IFIs), sovereigns and private lenders. Bantekas and Lumina, along with a team of global experts, establish the link between debt and the manner in which the accumulation of sovereign debt violates human rights, examining some of the conditions imposed by structural adjustment programs on debtor states with a view to servicing their debt. They outline how such conditions have been shown to exacerbate the debt itself at the expense of economic sovereignty, concluding that such measures worsen the borrower's economic situation, and are injurious to the entrenched rights of peoples.
COVID-19 and Sovereign Debt: The case of SADC
Title | COVID-19 and Sovereign Debt: The case of SADC PDF eBook |
Author | Daniel D. Bradlow |
Publisher | Pretoria University Law Press |
Pages | 383 |
Release | 2022-02-23 |
Genre | Law |
ISBN |
This multi-disciplinary publication focuses on the issue of African sovereign debt management and renegotiation/ restructuring, with a particular concentration on the countries that are members of the Southern Africa Development Community (SADC). It contains a series of essays that were initially presented in several workshops held at the height of the pandemic, in 2020. These essays seek to both understand the debt challenges facing these countries and to offer some policy-oriented suggestions on how they can more effectively address these. They include contributions by global and regional scholars who are seasoned experts and newer researchers and discuss the complexities on debt management and restructuring within the context of the global COVID-19 pandemic. In particular, this presented an opportunity for junior researchers from the region to contribute to international discussions on a topic in which the views of young Africans are not heard as often or as clearly as they should be, especially given the importance of the topic to Africa and its future. Further, this book is expected to stimulate debate among academics, activists, policy makers and practitioners on how SADC should manage its debt.
Re-Imagining Sovereign Debt in International Law through the lens of Socio-Economic Rights
Title | Re-Imagining Sovereign Debt in International Law through the lens of Socio-Economic Rights PDF eBook |
Author | Muhammad Bello |
Publisher | Pretoria University Law Press |
Pages | 425 |
Release | 2024-07-22 |
Genre | Law |
ISBN |
Re-imagining sovereign debt examines the extent to which sovereign debtors’ contractual obligations may be honoured where the socio-economic rights of their citizens face clear danger of non-realisation. It critiques the foundational legal paradigm that influences and shapes the substance of the sovereign debt regime. In doing this, the author employs legal theory to show the inadequacies of the regime in terms of its failure to embrace the dynamism of sovereign debt which he characterises as a debt with a complex mix of public-private elements, hybridity of norms and multiplicity of interests beyond the two-sided creditor-debtor matrix. By locating socio-economic rights in all critical phases of the regime, the author shows that the recurring circles of debt crises are linked to the continuing influence of the private law paradigm. The book offers a fresh perspective to re-imagine sovereign debt using insights from transnational legal theorists and advocates prioritising socio-economic rights considerations in debt contracting, restructuring and adjudication through a more concrete recognition of creditors’ responsibilities. Re-imagining sovereign debt will interest lawyers, policymakers, diplomats, scholars and researchers interested in the law, history and politics of sovereign debt.