Beyond Territoriality: Globalisation and Transnational Human Rights Obligations (GLOTHRO)

In the news

- Final conference and call for papers: 'Beyond State Obligations in International Human Rights Law - Towards Common Principles on the Obligations of Multiple Global Actors' (27-29 March 2014, Turku, Finland). Click here for more information.


Summary

Human rights violations occur daily, all over the world. Sovereign States legally bear the primary responsibility for human rights violations. But what happens when these States are not able to live up to their human rights obligations? Do other States have extraterritorial obligations to help them out? Which role should other actors (companies, international organisations) play? This Programme starts from the assumption that human rights obligations, in particular also in the field of economic, social and cultural rights, need to be re-thought in the present era of globalisation.
The displacement of the state and the increased power and impact of corporations and international organisations, pose major practical and conceptual challenges to human rights law. In practice, human rights law faces a serious risk of marginalisation if it fails to adapt to this changing reality. Conceptually, the decentralisation of the territorial state necessitates a fundamental re-thinking of a basic tenet of human rights law, i.e. that human rights obligations are primarily if not exclusively incumbent on the territorial state.
The proposed Programme intends to address a dual challenge, i.e. to deepen the understanding of human rights obligations of foreign states, and to bring together subfields of human rights study, i.e. on the human rights obligations of transnational corporations, international organisations and foreign states.
Currently, research on the topic is mostly done by individual researchers, and sometimes by relatively small research groups. Moreover, as this is a new field, most researchers are relatively young scientists. Not enough critical mass and expertise is available in any individual country of Europe to study transnational human rights obligations in all their complexity. The Programme will be instrumental in creating a real research community on the issue, in attracting new scholars to the field, as well as in mainstreaming the topic in human rights scholarship.

Duration

Four years, from May 2010 to May 2014.

The kick-off meeting of GLOTHRO has taken place in Strasbourg on 10-11 May 2010.

External website

For more information, please consult the GLOTHRO website: http://www.glothro.org