Long title
The Role of Lawyers under the United Nations Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights
Author(s)' contact information
Faculty of Law, Western University, London, Ontario, Canada
Conference title
International Legal Ethics Conference VI
Conference location
City University London
Country
United Kingdom
Year
2014
File
Seck & Pitel ILEC Slides.pptx104.97 KB
Select the option that describes the rights you hold in the attached content
I do not hold complete rights to all intellectual property in the attached content, but have permission from all people or entities who do hold rights in the attached content to post it on the Forum website and to grant the license, if any, that I have chosen below.
Select a license for the attached content
"Download Only": I give permission for other users to download the attached content, as long as they do not copy, distribute, repost it on the web, or alter the work in any way. (post-only permission)
Abstract
The United Nations Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights are a global standard for preventing and addressing the risk of adverse impacts on human rights linked to business activity. For the purpose of lawyers’ ethical obligations, the Guiding Principles are not laws in the same sense as statutes or jurisprudence. But this is far from saying that they are purely aspirational and can simply be ignored. The Guiding Principles are understood to require all businesses, regardless of size, to respect all human rights. The aim of this research project is to explain and analyze the nature of the Guiding Principles and assess their impact on Canadian lawyers. Questions to be considered include (i) whether it would be professional negligence not to take appropriate account of the Guiding Principles in advising clients and (ii) whether it would be an ethical breach to advise a client to breach the Guiding Principles or to assist a client in such a violation.
Teaching Topics
Other Topics
Lawyer Regulation