Multinational Corporations in International Law by Menno T. Kamminga

A multinational corporation is a centrally coordinated company that is established in more than one nation-state. A typical multinational corporation comprises a parent company in one state with subsidiaries in one or more other states. There is no uniform terminology, however. The United Nations continues to use the term “transnational corporation,” although many academic authors have dropped that term because of its association with the now discredited New International Economic Order. The International Labour Organization (ILO) and the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) employ the term “multinational enterprise.” The main difficulty with multinational corporations is the accountability or governance gap caused by the absence of corporate regulation in international law. In traditional international law, multinational corporations have rights but no obligations. In practice, therefore, multinational corporations are subject only to the domestic laws of the different states in which they operate. Since states compete with each other to attract investment from multinational corporations, the regulatory framework applicable to such corporations has a tendency to weaken rather than strengthen.

General Overviews

A couple of books and articles provide general overviews of the position of multinational corporations in international law and the balancing of their rights and duties. The most comprehensive among these works is Muchlinski 2007, summarized in Muchlinski 2009. Interesting early contributions include Vagts 1969–1970 and Seidl-Hohenveldern 1987. Highly critical assessments of multinational corporations and their legal status include Bakan 2004 and Stiglitz 2007.

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