- Identifying a Regulatory Gap that Can Put the Goals of the European Action Plan on Financing Sustainable Growth at Risk.
By Trude Myklebust, University of Oslo.
In Oslo Law Review
- Identifying a Regulatory Gap that Can Put the Goals of the European Action Plan on Financing Sustainable Growth at Risk.
By Trude Myklebust, University of Oslo.
In Oslo Law Review
By Tonia Novitz.
8 April 2020, International Organizations Law Review
February 2020, European Business Law Review
By María Jesús Muñoz-Torres, María Ángeles Fernández-Izquierdo, Juana María Rivera-Lirio, Idoya Ferrero-Ferrero og Elena Escrig-Olmedo.
8 May 2020, Environment, Development and Sustainability
By Icíar García-Pérez, María Ángeles Fernández-Izquierdo and María Jesús Muñoz-Torres.
29 March 2020, Sustainability Journal
By Ferrero-Ferrero, I., León, R., & Muñoz-Torres, M. J.
13 July 2020, Taylor and Francis Online
By David Monciardini, Jukka Mähönen and Georgina Tsagas.
7 August 2020, Accounting, Economics, and Law: A Convivium
By John Asland, University of Oslo.
In Nordic Inheritance Law through the Ages. Editors: Marianne Holdgaard, Auður Magnúsdóttir, and Bodil Selmer.
By Jukka Mähönen, University of Oslo
30 June 2020, Sustainability - Open Access Journal
By Beate Sjåfjell, University of Oslo
3 August 2020, Sustainability - Open Access Journal
By Eléonore Maitre-Ekern, University of Oslo, Mark Taylor, Fafo and Maya van der Velden, University of Oslo
8 May 2020, SSRN
By Jay Cullen, University of York, Jukka Mähönen, University of Oslo and Heidi Rapp Nilsen, Norut Northern Research Institute.
6 May 2020, SSRN
By Beate Sjåfjell, University of Oslo, and Hanna Ahlström, Swedish Royal Academy of Sciences
15 June 2020, SSRN
By Clair Gammage, University of Bristol, Svein Erik Stave, Hanna Ahlström, Swedish Royal Academy of Sciences, and Beate Sjåfjell, University of Oslo
8 May 2020, SSRN
By Beate Sjåfjell, University of Oslo, Jukka Mähönen, University of Oslo, Tonia A. Novitz, University of Bristol, Clair Gammage, University of Bristol and Hanna Ahlström, Swedish Royal Academy of Sciences
7 May 2020, SSRN
By Beate Sjåfjell, Jukka Mähönen, Mark B. Taylor, Eléonore Maitre-Ekern, Maja van der Velden, Tonia A. Novitz, Clair Gammage, Jay Cullen, Marta Andhov and Roberto Caranta
13 December 2019, SSRN
By Maja Van der Velden, University of Oslo, Mark B. Taylor, Fafo Institute & Martin Oteng-Ababio, University of Ghana
18 September 2019, PLATE 2019 Conference, Berlin
By Beate Sjåfjell, University of Oslo and María Jesús Muñoz-Torres, Jaume I University
26 April 2019, SSRN
This special issue of the journal Sustainability is based on the contributions at the conference ‘Corporate Sustainability Reforms: Securing Market Actors’ Contribution to Global Sustainability’ in Oslo on 24 October 2019. To achieve sustainability, it is crucial to secure the contribution of all market actors: Business, citizens, investors, and the public sector. The contributions engage from different perspectives with ways forward to support the transition to sustainability.
Editors of the special issue: Professor Beate Sjåfjell and Professor Maja van der Velden.
25 May 2020, Journal of Sustainability
This special issue explores attempts to advance respect for human rights in the context of business activity in global value chains. The special issue consists of an introduction and four articles which describe and interrogate some of the principle changes currently taking place in global value chain governance as these relate to human rights: the impact on worker power of the rise of larger emerging-market multinationals in value chains traditionally dominated by global brands; the limits of monitoring and transparency mechanisms as effective regulators of human rights in supply chains; the role of contracts in ensuring respect for human rights; and the possibility to use the courts to enforce respect for rights across fragmented production networks.
3 August 2019, Competition & Change Journal
The question of liability in corporate groups has been referred to as one of the great unsolved problems of modern company law. The acceptance in the late nineteenth century of companies as owners of shares in other companies gave legal basis for group structures. The transnational group of companies is the prevailing business form for both European enterprises and internationally.
February 2017, International and Comparative Corporate Law Journal