复杂:根据国际法起诉跨国公司犯罪活动的挑战

Jena Martin
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摘要

本文旨在解决一个日益棘手和相关的问题:如果跨国公司犯罪,你会怎么办?这个问题在哲学和实践上都提出了许多挑战。首先,起诉一个组织意味着什么?尽管有一些有限的例子(美国对安达信会计师事务所的起诉是最值得注意的例子之一),但我们对这将意味着什么的优先考虑相对较少;你究竟是如何对一家公司进行审判的?第二,实际上,你在哪里进行审判?根据定义,跨国公司有独立的法人,其住所在多个法域,这一事实加剧了这一挑战,从而根据治外法权原则提出了挑战。此外,作为国际法规定的非国家行为者,跨国公司在人权和人道主义法领域出现的问题上发挥着截然不同的法律作用(但往往会引发最残忍的罪行)。因此,本文希望进行一次“思考练习”,试图提供一份全面的清单,列出起诉跨国公司可能面临的挑战。此外,本文还将研究其他人提出的一些解决方案(特别是利用国际刑事法院作为起诉跨国公司的场所),并讨论这样做所带来的陷阱,股东和更大的社区——最终可能为其起诉付出代价。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
It's Complicated: The Challenge of Prosecuting TNCs for Criminal Activity Under International Law
This essay aims to tackle an increasingly thorny and relevant issue: what do you do if a Transnational Corporation (TNC) commits a crime? The question raises a number of challenges, both philosophically and practically. First, what does it mean to prosecute an organization? Although there are some limited examples (the United States’ prosecution of accounting firm Arthur Andersen being among the most note-worthy), we have relatively little precedence regarding what this would entail; how exactly do you put a corporation on trial? Second, practically speaking, where do you hold the trial? This challenge is magnified by the fact that, by definition, TNCs have separate legal personalities that are domiciled in numerous jurisdictions, raising challenges based on jurisdictional principles of extraterritoriality. In addition, as non-state actors under international law, TNCs have a very different legal role in issues that arise within the human rights and humanitarian law field (but often gives rise to the most brutal crimes). As such, this essay hopes to engage in a “thought exercise” that attempts to provide a comprehensive list of the challenges that could come from prosecuting a TNC. In addition, this essay will examine some solutions suggested by others (specifically, using the International Criminal Court as a venue to prosecute TNCs) and discuss the attendant pitfalls of doing so. Finally, the essay concludes that the successful prosecution of a TNC may amount to a Pyrrhic victory in that many stakeholders – including managers, shareholders and the larger community – could ultimately pay the price for its prosecution.
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