Results 51 to 60 of about 419 (182)
Are CSR incidents truly bad news?
Abstract We revisit whether disclosures of negative Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) incidents adversely affect firms' stock prices. While univariate tests reveal significant negative abnormal returns around incident announcements, the effect disappears once firm characteristics, industry, and time‐fixed effects are controlled for.
Chen Chen +2 more
wiley +1 more source
“Yukos v. the Russian Federation” and the Jurisdictional Immunity of the State
Former shareholders of “Yukos” started proceedings aimed at recognition and enforcement of the 3 arbitral awards dated 18 July 2014 rendered on the claims against the Russian Federation.
Ilia V. Rachkov, Nadezhda A. Churilina
doaj +1 more source
ABSTRACT This article examines how long‐standing local conflicts concerning the nature of common property, the distribution of access and administrative rights associated with it, and more broadly the nature of the community and the forms of citizenship that organise its governance shape demands for justice regarding land transfers to outside investors
Eric Léonard +2 more
wiley +1 more source
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Giuliana Magalhães Rigoni
doaj +4 more sources
Purposeful Management and the Public Good: Relationships, Tensions, and Consequences
Abstract Traditional management practices have long prioritized organizational performance and financial growth, primarily serving shareholder interests. However, escalating societal and environmental challenges – such as climate change, human rights violations, the dismantling of democratic institutions, and public health crises – raise questions ...
Gideon D. Markman +5 more
wiley +1 more source
UKRAINE’S ENERGY POLICY IN THE POST-SOVIET ERA
Following the collapse of the USSR, Ukraine has found itself in a heavy, almost insurmountable dependence on imported oil and gas resources. However, owing to the inherited soviet infrastructure and strategic location, it has become a key transit state ...
Y. V. Borovsky
doaj +1 more source
Do deepfakes, digital replicas and human digital twins justify personality rights?
Abstract Unauthorised deepfakes are deeply problematic, from the spreading of misinformation to non‐consensual pornographic content. This paper asks whether deepfakes, digital replicas and human digital twins justify personality rights. To address this question, it examines the harms that deepfakes can cause through disinformation, demeaning content ...
Hayleigh Bosher
wiley +1 more source
Regulating critical technologies: National security and intellectual property
Abstract In recent years, claims of ‘national security’ have surged internationally to protect various security interests including public health, economic security and cybersecurity. National industrial strategies for building critical technologies challenge the scope of ‘national security’ in international intellectual property (IP) protection ...
Phoebe Li, Atilla Kasap
wiley +1 more source
Life cycle thinking in plastics design
Abstract This article aims to contribute to the ongoing scholarly reflection on the intersection between law and (plastics) production. It builds on the importance of ‘design’ for a more sustainable plastics economy by examining the role of law in bringing life cycle considerations into the design phase.
Laurel Besco, Eva R. van der Marel
wiley +1 more source
Rights of Nature in the EU: A thought experiment to improve access to justice
Abstract Against the backdrop of the growing need for legal innovation in environmental protection, this article explores the interplay between Rights of Nature (RoN)—a legal theory asserting that the inherent moral value of nature must be protected legally by granting rights and legal personality to nature itself—and the EU constitutional right of ...
Emma Sanvito, Mariolina Eliantonio
wiley +1 more source

