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 William Webster, Robert Weatherley


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The Cambridge Handbook of Law and Responsible Business: Legal Strategies for Sustainability in Global Value Chains

Edited by: Ricardo Garcia Anton, Debadatta Bose, Anne Lafarre, Bas Rombouts, Verbruggen. Paul

ISBN13: 9781009631617
To be Published: December 2026
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Paperback
Price: £60.00





This Handbook provides the first comprehensive examination of the legal strategies around the world shaping sustainability in global value chains. Bringing together leading scholars, it maps how diverse legal disciplines (including corporate law, labour law, tax law, tort law, private law, environmental law, international law and more) conceptualise and regulate the complex architectures of cross-border production. Through a unifying analytical framework, the book reveals how fragmented regulatory approaches can complement one another, and how legal tools may address the environmental, social, and economic challenges that global production networks create and sustain. Covering jurisdictions across the globe and engaging with emerging regulatory instruments such as due diligence laws, sustainability reporting obligations, climate transition plans, and international taxation initiatives, this Handbook offers an indispensable resource for academics, policymakers, practitioners, and students concerned with responsible business conduct and sustainable development.

This title is also available as open access on Cambridge Core.

Contents:
Preface
1. Introduction

Part I. Theoretical Perspectives:
2. From market contracts to global value chains, digital platforms and the circular economy: charting a history and future of private law in global production
Jaakko Salminen
3. Due diligence in GVCs: realigning powers and responsibilities
Fabrizio Cafaggi
4. Information problems in global value chains
Silvia Ciacchi
5. Global value chains as sacrifize zones: extractivism and the frontiers of transformation
Peer Zumbansen

Part II. Corporate Governance:
6. Exploring corporate sustainability law in global value chains
Beate Sjåfjell
7. Exploring corporate sustainability reporting strategies: a case-study analysis of the SFDR reporting by EU Banks
Steffie van den Bosch and Christoph Van der Elst
8. Sustainable corporate governance in India
Harpreet Kaur
9. Corporate politics, trade politics and prospects for a US value chain due diligence law
Christopher Bruner

Part III. European Due Diligence Laws:
10. Responsible purchasing and responsible procurement as part of HREDD – the example of the CSDDD
Michaela Streibelt and Daniel Schönfelder
11. A six-question guide to climate transition plans
Tim Bleeker
12. Civil liability and enforcement of the French vigilance law
Christophe Clerc
13. Enforcement of the German supply chain act
Fernanda Bremenkamp

Part IV. Civil Liability:
14. Corporate liability design for environmental wrongdoing: the comparative prospects of cross-jurisdictional tort liability and mandatory due diligence
Nick Friedman and Ross Guinea-McIntyre
15. Corporate control and tort liability in global value chains
Ger van der Sangen and Anne Lafarre
16. The tort of irresponsible contracting: the supply chain liability principle of Begum v Maran
Debadatta Bose
17. The quest for justice in global value chains: perspectives from private international law
Elsabe Schoeman
18. Regulating the law governing civil liability under the EU corporate sustainability due diligence directive
Geert Van Calster and Nathan Willems
19. Towards credible corporate net-zero commitments? On the role of unfair commercial practices law in contesting global value chain greenwashing
Paul Verbruggen

Part V. Labour Standards:
20. Securing decent work in global value chains
Bas Rombouts and Debadatta Bose
21. The incorporation of the method of human rights due diligence into the principles and institutions of labour law
Beryl ter Haar and Attila Kun
22. Epitomising Ruggie's 'smart mix' through access to remedy provisions in mandatory human rights legislation – an analysis EU conflict minerals regulation and the EU batteries regulation
Yvonne Erkens and Manuella Appiah

Part VI. International Taxation:
23. Tax sustainability reporting and global value chains: a normative ethics approach
Mart van Hulten
24. International corporate taxation: the role of transfer pricing and cooperative compliance
Alessandro Turina and Marco Allena
25. Pillar two, value creation and sustainability in global value chains
Ricardo Galendi
26. The enforcement of tax abuse standards by arbitration tribunals: exploring judicial dialogue as a strategy to achieve sustainability
Ricardo Garcia Anton and Daniel Mathew

Part VII. Sector-Specific Strategies:
27. Litigating climate-conscious mining for a just energy transition: emerging regulatory insights for global value chains
Thalia Viveros Uehara
28. Making sense of responsibility in the global data value chain
Kebene Kejela Wodajo
29. Towards a sustainable and circular textile value chain: assessing regulatory initiatives in the European Union
Alexandra Naecsu and Bert Keirsbilck