Privatization, the Role of Enterprises and the Implementation of Social and Economic Rights: A Comparison of Rights-Based and Administrative Approaches in India and China

L. Backer
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Abstract

From the middle of the last century, socio-economic rights have been bound up in the ideology of the state within national legal orders and through the construction of an important edifice of public international law and institutions. Globalization may be changing both the focus and locus of socio-economic rights, adding a private sector dimension to what had been an almost purely public institution project. The state and public international organizations have been making room for the multinational corporation and global civil society. In lieu of a hierarchically arranged global system of public power managing socio-economic rights, governance fracture and polycentricism have complicated the regulatory landscape, making it sometimes harder to see where public law ends and private affairs begin. This study examines the ways in which the development of socio-economic rights has moved beyond the state in two of the most important emerging free market economies — China and India. After introducing the current formal division of human rights between political and civil rights (a focus of the Global North discourse) and social and economic rights (a focus of Global South discourse), Part II of this Article briefly focuses on the way in which social and economic rights are understood within India and China. Part III then considers two case studies as a means of structuring discussion; the first from India, involving two large multinational enterprises and the rights-based approach; the second from China, involving the development of complex administrative and rules-based private corporate social responsibility (CSR) codes of conduct. Part IV concludes with some general observations about globalization, privatization, and the advancement of human rights regimes. In China, privatization is grounded in state obligation, administrative approaches, and private rule systems. In India, privatization is grounded in individual rights-based and civil and political rights-based judicial approaches. Though both incorporate international norms, they achieve this incorporation in substantially different ways. These examples will serve to suggest the ways in which both privatization and corporate actors now play an increasingly important role in realizing socio-economic rights, and the way approaches to economic and social rights are fracturing at the private as well as the public law level. Indeed, within the forms of privatized frameworks for the development of economic and social rights, India and China evidence the ways in which political division has now also been privatized and replicated — providing an additional space within which the tensions, already quite evident in the state system’s difficulties with human rights, may be replayed.
私营化、企业角色与社会经济权利的落实:印度与中国权利本位与行政本位的比较
从上个世纪中叶开始,社会经济权利在国家法律秩序中,通过国际公法和国际制度的重要大厦的建设,被捆绑在国家的意识形态中。全球化可能正在改变社会经济权利的重点和中心,在几乎纯粹是公共机构项目的基础上增加私营部门的内容。国家和国际公共组织一直在为跨国公司和全球公民社会腾出空间。在管理社会经济权利的公共权力的全球等级体系中,治理断裂和多中心主义使监管格局变得复杂,有时使人更难看清公法的终结和私人事务的开始。本研究考察了在两个最重要的新兴自由市场经济体——中国和印度,社会经济权利的发展是如何超越国家的。在介绍了目前人权在政治和公民权利(全球北方话语的重点)和社会和经济权利(全球南方话语的重点)之间的正式划分之后,本文的第二部分简要地关注了印度和中国内部理解社会和经济权利的方式。然后,第三部分考虑了两个案例研究,作为构建讨论的手段;第一个来自印度,涉及两家大型跨国企业和基于权利的做法;第二个来自中国,涉及制定复杂的行政和基于规则的私营企业社会责任(CSR)行为准则。第四部分总结了一些关于全球化、私有化和人权制度进步的一般性观察。在中国,私有化的基础是国家义务、行政手段和私人规则体系。在印度,私有化的基础是基于个人权利和基于公民权利和政治权利的司法办法。虽然两者都纳入了国际规范,但它们实现这一纳入的方式却大不相同。这些例子将有助于表明私有化和公司行为者现在在实现社会经济权利方面发挥日益重要作用的方式,以及在私法和公法一级实现经济和社会权利的方式正在分裂。事实上,在发展经济和社会权利的私有化框架的形式内,印度和中国证明了政治分裂现在也被私有化和复制的方式- -提供了一个额外的空间,在这个空间内,国家制度在人权方面的困难中已经相当明显的紧张局势可能会重演。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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