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Mahdev Mohan and Cynthia Morel (eds.), Business and Human Rights in Southeast Asia: Risk and the Regulatory Turn (London: Routledge, 2015) pp xx + 284.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 May 2016

Farzana ASLAM*
Affiliation:
Principal Lecturer Faculty of Law, University of Hong Kong

Abstract

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Type
Book Reviews
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 

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References

1 World Bank, ‘East Asia and Pacific Economic Update, October 2015: Staying the Course’, http://www.worldbank.org/en/region/eap/publication/east-asia-pacific-economic-update (accessed 10 February 2016).

2 Mohan, Mahdev and Morel, Cynthia (eds.), Business and Human Rights in Southeast Asia: Risk and the Regulatory Turn (London: Routledge, 2015) 2829 Google Scholar.

3 Ibid, 55–6.

4 Ibid, 57.

5 Ibid, 93.

6 Equator Principles Association, ‘Equator Principles III’ (2013), http://www.equator-principles.com/index.php/ep3 (accessed 10 February 2016). The author notes that despite the widespread adoption of the Equator Principles by global banks, banks from ASEAN countries have not yet adopted the Equator Principles or comparable policies to guide project finance lending decisions. Mohan and Morel (eds.), note 2, 107.

7 Mohan and Morel (eds.), note 2, 157.

8 Ibid, 159.

9 Ibid, 226.

10 ASEAN, ‘ASEAN Human Rights Declaration 2012’, http://aichr.org/documents/ (accessed 10 February 2016).

11 Mohan and Morel (eds.), note 2, xix.