Lawyers in China - the past decade and beyond
In: Occasional papers, reprints series in contemporary Asian studies 1991,6 = 107
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In: Occasional papers, reprints series in contemporary Asian studies 1991,6 = 107
In: New York University journal of international law & politics, Band 23, S. 751-799
ISSN: 0028-7873
In: New York University journal of international law & politics, Band 23, Heft 3, S. 751
ISSN: 0028-7873
In: Cornell international law journal, Band 22, S. 255-268
ISSN: 0010-8812
In: Timothy A. Gelatt & Richard D. Pomp, Tax Aspects of Doing Business with the People's Republic of China, 22 Colum. J. Transnat'l L. 421 (1984)
SSRN
Should companies invest at all in countries, like China, where severe human rights abuses are pervasive? If they do invest, should they restrict their operations to areas of the country that have a comparatively good human rights record? Are there basic principles that transnational companies should observe to ensure, at a minimum, that they do not become complicit in a host government's abrogation of universally-recognized human rights? Should such principles be enforced by Executive or congressional fiat, or should companies take primary responsibility for policing themselves? How can companies that wish to factor human rights considerations into their business decisions be assured that they will not pay a price in lost investment opportunities or reduced market share? This article addresses these questions in light of relevant principles of international law and U.S. foreign policy. A central thesis of this article is that businesses that may or do invest in China bear a responsibility to ensure that their actions do not, however inadvertently, contribute to the systematic denial of human rights in the PRC. We believe, moreover, that international human rights law provides an objective basis for identifying those responsibilities.
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In: Columbia journal of transnational law, Band 22, Heft 3, S. 421
ISSN: 0010-1931
In: Richard D. Pomp, Timothy A. Gelatt & Stanley S. Surrey, The Evolving Tax System of the People's Republic of China, 16 Tex. Int'l L.J. 11 (1981)
SSRN
In: 3 East Asian Executive Reports 8, 1981
SSRN
Die Einzelbeiträge des Sammelbandes behandeln die Entwicklung des sozialistischen Rechtssystems der VR China seit 1949, die Taiwan-Problematik betreffende rechtliche Aspekte der sino-amerikanischen Beziehungen, neuere Tendenzen der chinesischen Wirtschaftsgesetzgebung, Entwicklung und Stand der Forschung und der Lehre des Völkerrechts in der VR China sowie der westlichen Forschung und Lehre zum modernen Recht und Rechtssystems der VR China, steuerrechtliche Aspekte des China-Geschäfts und schließlich die Implikationen der US-Handelsgesetze für die Entwicklung der sino-amerikanischen Handelsbeziehungen. Der Anhang enthält eine umfangreiche Bibliographie englischsprachiger Studien zum Recht und Rechtssystem der VR China. (BIOst-Klk)
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