Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-dsjbd Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-25T20:17:52.972Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Beyond the Governance Gap: Accountability in Privatized Migration Control

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 April 2020

Abstract

This Article focuses on the accountability challenges raised by the increased involvement of Private Military and Security Companies (PMSC) in migration control. I argue that migration control activities outsourced to PMSC can be classified as high-risk operations for the purposes of the application of relevant business and human rights standards. This reclassification of migration control activities as high-risk business operations, in turn, has two significant implications in terms of establishing accountability for PMSC’s wrongful conduct. First, it acknowledges that the privatization of migration control, especially within the context of continued containment and deterrence trends, entails a high risk of human rights abuses to which PMSC may contribute, both directly and indirectly. Second, this reclassification enables us to identify heightened obligations vested upon the home state of a PMSC, as well as the heightened responsibility of PMSC themselves. The article also examines what these heightened obligations and responsibilities entail.

Type
Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s) 2020. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the German Law Journal

A. Introduction

This Article focuses on the accountability challenges raised by the increased involvement of PMSC in migration control. The involvement of private non-state actors in the implementation of migration control operations is not a new phenomenon.Footnote 1 There is a long history, for instance, of “indirect privatization”Footnote 2 of migration control, whereby the relationship between the state and the company is not stipulated through a direct contractual relationship but through the imposition of civil or criminal liability. The first type of indirect privatization in the context of migration control was introduced through carrier sanctions,Footnote 3 whilst more direct forms of outsourcing to private non-state actors have historically included the implementation of visa policies;Footnote 4 the handling of security checks at the border; and involvement in immigration detention,Footnote 5 deportation, and removal. Unofficial border patrols have also often seen the involvement of private actors, ranging from individuals to organized paramilitary forces allied with extreme right-wing groups.Footnote 6 More recently private non-state actors, and Private Military and Security Companies (PMSC)Footnote 7 more specifically, have been increasingly involved in researching the security dimensions of migration;Footnote 8 providing security services for reception and transfer centers, sometimes under the supervision of international organizations; and providing and managing border technology infrastructures,Footnote 9 accommodation,Footnote 10 food, and cash cardsFootnote 11 for refugees and asylum seekers.

In this Article, I focus on the well-known legal challenges encountered in attempting to hold PMSC accountable for the human rights harm they have caused or contributed to, mainly in terms of attribution and jurisdiction. Specifically, I examine the added value that the United Nations Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights (UNGP)Footnote 12 provide in ascertaining state responsibility for business-related human rights abuses occurring in the migration context. The UNGP—adopted unanimously in 2011 by the United Nations Human Rights Council—provide a three-pillar framework aimed at clarifying the states’ obligation to protect human rights from third party interference (pillar one); the companies’ responsibility to respect human rights throughout their operations (pillar two); and the need to ensure effective remedies when human rights harm is caused, directly or indirectly, by business activities (pillar three). I will therefore consider the accountability challenges raised by outsourcing migration control from the complementary perspective of the UNGP by discussing how careful regulation of business activities may provide a pathway to accountability in domestic courts. As I discuss in this Article, migration control activities, which are outsourced to PMSC, can be classified as high-risk operations for the purposes of the application of the UNGP.Footnote 13 According to the UNGP, all companies involved in high-risk operations require a higher degree of engagement and rigor when carrying out a more complex process of human rights due diligence.Footnote 14 This due diligence generally implies an assessment of the way in which a company can adversely impact human rights through its own operations. In the language of the UNGP, an “adverse human rights impact occurs when an action removes or reduces the ability of an individual to enjoy his or her rights.”Footnote 15 The reclassification of migration control activities as high-risk operations, in turn, has two significant implications in terms of establishing accountability for PMSC’s wrongful conduct. First, it acknowledges that the privatization of migration control, especially within the context of continued containment and deterrence trends,Footnote 16 entails a high risk of gross human rights abuses to which PMSC may contribute, both directly and indirectly. Second, based on a joint reading of UNGP 7, UNGP 17(b), UNGP 23(c), and UNGP 24,Footnote 17 this reclassification enables us to identify heightened obligations vested upon the state in which the parent company of a PMSC is registered or domiciled (home state) as well as heightened responsibility of the PMSC themselves.

The main argument put forward in this Article is that heightened home state obligations mean, at a minimum, an obligation to regulate the transnational activities of PMSC domiciled within a home state’s territory in order to both prevent them from causing, or contributing to, transnational human rights harm and provide redress when such harm occurs. In order to ensure accountability for human rights abuses through regulation, homes states are required to introduce mandatory human rights due diligence and provide effective remedies for any harm deriving from the wrongful conduct of the PMSC. Effective remedies would include, inter alia, providing access to the courts of the home state of the PMSC and imposing civil and criminal liability on PMSC for their wrongful conduct. As I demonstrate in this Article, the UNGP acknowledge that, in situations in which there is a high risk of gross abuses, home states are under an obligation to meaningfully regulate the transnational activities of PMSC domiciled in their territory. Failure to regulate would result in a breach of the home state’s obligation to protect from foreseeable human rights abuses by PMSC, that is, a breach of a positive obligation to protect.

The argument is developed as follows: Section B clarifies the reasons why, for the purposes of the application of the UNGP, migration control contexts involve high-risk operations. It also explains how this reclassification results in heightened home states’ obligations and heightened PMSC’s responsibility, as envisaged by the UNGP. Section C discusses whether this reconceptualization might be useful to bridge the accountability gap that usually characterizes corporate human rights abuses resulting from the cooperation between states and private non-state actors such as PMSC, including in contexts of transnational migration control. Section D concludes with some reflections on the relevance of state responsibility arguments supported by the UNGP.

B. Privatized Migration Control and High Risk of Gross Human Rights Abuses

I. The Meaning of “High Risk” in the UNPG

The multiplicity of human rights abuses occurring within the context of migration control and the direct or indirect involvement of PMSC in such abuses have been accurately documented in the literature.Footnote 18 The achievement of an effective remedy for victims of business-related abuse, however, remains elusive, not least because traditionally non-state actors are not directly bound by international law. Home states are also reluctant to comprehensively regulate the transnational activities of companies registered or domiciled in their jurisdiction,Footnote 19 partly in fear of loss of competitiveness, partly because of the benefit they may gain from such transnational activities. More comprehensive regulation would contribute to the establishment of clearer horizontal obligations in domestic law and regulatory frameworks,Footnote 20 and in turn close the “governance gap”Footnote 21 between the human rights standards enshrined in relevant human rights instruments and reflected in the UNGP on the one hand, and the measures adopted by states and companies to ensure effective remedies on the other. This governance gap appears particularly accentuated in the context of PMSC’s involvement in migration control, where states’ willingness to contain and deter migration is matched by a marked increase, over the last two decades, in the criminalizationFootnote 22 and securitizationFootnote 23 of migration, including through cooperation with countries in the region of originFootnote 24 and with private security actors.

As explained in this Section, to define a business operational context as “high risk,” it is necessary to take into consideration the human rights abuses taking place throughout a company’s business operations. This means that a company should not only be aware of the abuses taking place within the specific countries in which it operates, but also consider the broader context of its activities, and ascertain both the actual and potential adverse human rights impact related to such contexts.Footnote 25 It is important to note that all conflict-affected contexts—irrespective of their legal classification and of whether the armed conflict is still ongoing or has subsided—will entail a high prevalence of human rights abuses, and therefore pose a high risk for a company to become involved in them. Various other complex operational contexts, however, even though not necessarily related to armed hostilities, will also qualify as “high risk.” For the purposes of our analysis, the provision of services that enable and contribute to migration policies resulting in human rights abuses also constitute high-risk contexts and high-risk business operations. Consider, for instance, the provision by the Nakamoto Group of substandard medical care in United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s (ICE) immigration detention centers,Footnote 26 which has led to detainees dying of treatable and preventable diseases.Footnote 27 Similarly, in US states and cities where the ICE is increasingly relying on the use of ankle bracelets as a “more humane” alternative to immigration detention,Footnote 28 Global Positioning System (GPS) tracking and supervision services are increasingly outsourced to private security companies.Footnote 29 This electronic monitoring practice has raised concerns not only in terms of privacy rights, data sharing, and health implications of wearing the device,Footnote 30 but also in relation to the lawfulness of this outsourcing, which often results in an automatic ineligibility for bail or in a rise in the level of immigrants’ indebtedness. The high costs for the cash bond (on average USD 8,000–10,000) and for the GPS tracking services, in fact, are passed on to the detainees wearing such electronic devices. Security companies provide financing to those who cannot afford the cash bond but, in return, the detainees must pay for activating the ankle bracelet (USD 460); for leasing it and being tracked (USD 420 per month for the duration of the “bail);”Footnote 31 and ultimately for repaying the cash bond. If they cannot afford to pay, they are usually returned to detention in inhuman and degrading conditions.Footnote 32

While there is no agreed-upon definition of “high-risk areas,”Footnote 33 and Principles 7 and 23(c) of the UNGP only refer to conflict-affected areas and the heightened risk of gross human rights abuses there, it is possible to refer to other relevant definitions to evince the scope and content of these terms. The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), for instance, defines “conflict-affected and high-risk areas” as follows:

Conflict-affected and high-risk areas are identified by the presence of armed conflict, widespread violence or other risks of harm to people. Armed conflict may take a variety of forms, such as a conflict of international or non-international character, which may involve two or more states, or may consist of wars of liberation, or insurgencies, civil wars, etc. High-risk areas may include areas of political instability or repression, institutional weakness, insecurity, collapse of civil infrastructure and widespread violence. Such areas are often characterised by widespread human rights abuses and violations of national or international law.Footnote 34

Similarly, the EU definition of “conflict-affected and high-risk areas” characterizes them as “[a]reas in a state of armed conflict, fragile post-conflict areas, as well as areas witnessing weak or non-existing governance and security, such as failed states, and widespread and systematic violations of international law, including human rights abuses.”Footnote 35 The guidance produced by the UN Global Compact and the UN Principles for Responsible Investment initiative also clarified that the terms “conflict affected” and “high risk areas” could include situations “in which there are serious concerns about abuses of human rights and political and civil liberties, but where violent conflict is not currently present.”Footnote 36 Both of these definitions therefore treat “conflict-affected areas” as an example of “high-risk areas” generally.

As illustrated by the examples presented above, if we apply the above contextual definitions to current situations in which migration control operations are implemented, various elements of such operations clearly suggest that they are taking place in high-risk areas and/or in contexts that increasingly entail high-risk operations, irrespective of the existence of an armed conflict. For instance, a closer examination of the cooperation between Italy and Libya indicates that Libya’s territory, both on land and at sea, represents a crucial theatre of Italian and EU migration control operations. The memorandum of understanding between Italy and Libya, signed in 2017Footnote 37 and renewed in autumn 2019,Footnote 38 includes cooperation on migration control, whereby Italy provides training and equipment to the Libyan coast guard to intercept EU-bound irregular migrants at sea and return them to Libya. Irrespective of whether we consider the situation on the ground in Libya to amount to a situation of armed conflict or to a post-conflict situation, Libya qualifies as a conflict-affected country as understood by UNGP 7. Given the well-documented widespread violations of international law, including human rights abuses against migrants, occurring both in Libyan territorial waters and in official and unofficial detention centers around the country, Libya also meets the criteria of a high-risk area as defined above. PMSC have been supplying advanced border control systems to Libya for at least a decade,Footnote 39 when conditions in Libyan detention centers were already such as to amount to torture or inhuman and degrading treatment, and return to Libya to refoulement because it exposed them to the risk of ill-treatment. The decision by the European Court of Human Rights in Hirsi Jamaa and Others v. Italy,Footnote 40 indeed, found that the prohibition against refoulement was breached by Italy’s interception and pushback of migrants to Libya in 2008. This was because the Italian authorities knew or should have known that the people returned to Libya “would be exposed in Libya to treatment in breach of the [Convention] and they would not be given any kind of protection in that country,” in breach of Article 3 of the European Convention of Human Rights (ECHR).Footnote 41 Human rights reports unanimously suggest that the situation has not improved since.Footnote 42 Any business involving the provision of advanced border control systems to Libyan authorities in such a context would be at risk of causing or contributing to human rights abuses, as they would be at risk of contributing to the implementation of the migration control operations found in contravention of Article 3 ECHR.

UNGP 23(c) makes explicit reference to “gross human rights abuses.” The commentary to this principle mentions conflict-affected areas as an example of complex operating environment in which the risks of enterprises being complicit in such abuses committed by other actors may increase.Footnote 43 Although the UNGP do not define “gross abuses,” already in 1999, UN independent expert Cherif Bassiouni confirmed that the same contextual approach pertaining to high-risk contexts is also relevant to defining the term “gross violation of human rights.”Footnote 44 This term, he explained, is used to “describe situations involving human rights violations by referring to the manner in which the violations may have been committed or to their severity,” rather than to denote a specific category of violations. In this sense, it is employed with reference to the factual circumstances of the abuse, thus also to the operational contexts in which business activities are carried out. The Interpretive Guide to the UNGP drafted in 2012 by the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) provides a non-exhaustive list of examples and refers to the gravity of the abuse:

There is no uniform definition of gross human rights violations in international law, but the following practices would generally be included: genocide, slavery and slavery-like practices, summary or arbitrary executions, torture, enforced disappearances, arbitrary and prolonged detention, and systematic discrimination. Other kinds of human rights violations, including of economic, social and cultural rights, can also count as gross violations if they are grave and systematic, for example violations taking place on a large scale or targeted at particular population groups.Footnote 45

The commentary to UNGP 14 also clarifies that the “severity of impacts will be judged by their scale, scope and irremediable character.”Footnote 46 The OHCHR Interpretive Guide further explains that the impact of business activities will be deemed to be severe based on the gravity of the harm, the number of people affected—both immediately and in the future— and whether it is possible to “restore those affected to a situation at least the same as, or equivalent to, their situation before the adverse impact.”Footnote 47 Based on the above, there is little doubt that the harm risked by the migrants returned to Libya—at the time of the circumstances described in the Hirsi case as well as in those pertaining to current migration control operations—entails severe impacts,Footnote 48 meaning that there is a high risk of gross human rights abuses in Libya.

As discussed above, beyond conflict-affected contexts such as the one in Libya, other transnational migration control operations increasingly take place in highly volatile and securitized environmentsFootnote 49 where the severity of the impact (in terms of scale, scope and irremediable character) is such that there is a high risk of involvement in gross human rights abuses. Drones, border patrol vehicles and vessels, cameras, facial recognition systems, thermal vision equipment, biometric and surveillance systems are increasingly supplied and managed by PMSC to carry out migration control measures.Footnote 50 Thus, while the border security apparatus rapidly expands,Footnote 51 the business opportunities for PMSC are also set to increase because of their long-standing expertise in highly securitized and unstable environments. As already mentioned above, the same PMSC do not only provide high-tech security systems, but also essential services for refugees and asylum seekers, such as access to health care and housing, food, and cash cards. These essential services are not only increasingly privatized, because they are outsourced to for-profit private non-state actors, but also increasingly securitized, as they are provided as part of broader security service “packages” offered by PMSC. In turn, as externalization and containment become the primary aims of migration control policies, and reflect a rising hostility against migrants,Footnote 52 the risk of PMSC’s direct and indirect involvement in gross abuses at various stages of the migration journey increase. As explained in this Section, PMSC can be implicated in gross human rights abuses in various ways. Thus, the presence of an armed conflict is not definitive in ascertaining whether a business enterprise is exposed to a high risk of being involved in gross human rights abuses. What is key, instead, is understanding the operational context in which a company operates, and the severity of the actual and potential adverse human rights impact that it might have.

II. Home States’ Obligations in High-Risk Situations

A careful reading of the UNGP clearly reveals that whenever companies become involved in the implementation and operationalization of migration control, they embark in high-risk operations, that is to say business operations that entail a high risk of gross abuses.

Where the risk of gross human rights abuses is heightened, the UNGP recognize under pillar one the existence of heightened obligations vested upon the home state of the PMSC and heightened responsibilities for the companies themselves. According to UNGP 7, in fact, home states of PMSC involved in the implementation of migration policies which engender a high risk of gross human rights abuses are expected to “help them identify, prevent and mitigate the human rights-related risks of their activities and business relationships” and “to assess and address heightened risks of abuses.”Footnote 53 As further explained in the commentary to UNGP 7Footnote 54 and in another United Nations Human Rights Council report in an addendum to the UNGP,Footnote 55 home states’ engagement is not to be understood as replacing but as complementing the engagement of host states where the PMSC are deployed. Engagement by home states should be proactive and take place as early as possible, in order to help companies avoid involvement in human rights abuses before the situation escalates.Footnote 56 UNGP 7, as discussed above, refers specifically to gross abuses and, therefore, concerns human rights abuses of a severe nature, because of their gravity, scale, scope, and irremediability.Footnote 57 The grossness of the abuse, therefore, is reinforced by the increased likelihood of occurrenceFootnote 58 and both demands that home states are not only proactive and supportive of cooperative companies, but also that they deny “access to public support and services for a business enterprise that is involved with gross human rights abuses and refuses to cooperate in addressing the situation.” Crucially, UNGP 7(d) also requires home states to “ensur[e] that their current policies, legislation, regulations and enforcement measures are effective in addressing the risk of business involvement in gross human rights abuses.” The addendum report on conflict-affected areas confirms that home states should establish adequate regulatory frameworks; clarify the applicability of such frameworks to business entities; and—for the most extreme situations—“make sure that the relevant agencies are properly resourced to address the problem of business involvement in international or transnational crimes, such as corruption, war crimes or crimes against humanity.”Footnote 59 The commentary to UNGP 7 further clarifies that states should also “consider multilateral approaches to prevent and address [gross human rights abuses], as well as support effective collective initiatives.”Footnote 60

At this point, it is important to note that the broader debate over whether a home state has a general duty, in international law, to regulate the transnational activities of a company registered in its territory and/or jurisdiction, continues to generate a vast amount of literature.Footnote 61 This is partly because when the UNGP were adopted in 2011, the commentary to UNGP 2 took a conservative approach to the debate by stating that “[a]t present States are not generally required under international human rights law to regulate the extraterritorial activities of business domiciled in their territory and/or jurisdiction. Nor are they generally prohibited from doing so, provided there is a recognized jurisdictional basis.” While the general debate in international law is thus far from settled, it is relatively uncontroversialFootnote 62 to state that in high-risk contexts, because of the nature of gross abuses and of their high likelihood of occurrence, home states have a duty to appropriately and effectively regulate the transnational conduct of business enterprises in order to prevent business-related human rights abuses. The 2013 OHCHR report on corporate liability for gross human rights abuses clarified that, although the UNGP are technically a non-binding instrument,

their provisions include restatements of existing international legal obligations. At the very least, they are evidence of an emerging consensus concerning the steps that State should now be taking, and the areas to be prioritized for action, in order to meet their responsibilities towards victims in cases where businesses are implicated or involved in gross human rights abuses.Footnote 63

III. Business Responsibility in High-Risk Situations

The provisions under pillar two of the UNGP provide that, in light of their responsibility to respect human rights, business enterprises should avoid infringing on the rights of others and address negative impacts that they have caused or contributed to. The primary mechanism to operationalize this responsibility to respect is human rights due diligence,Footnote 64 which essentially consists of a set of processes aimed at ensuring that a company assesses its actual and potential “adverse impacts”; takes action when such adverse impacts are identified; tracks and communicates to relevant stakeholders the ways in which it addresses such impacts; and contributes to remediating them. As I have argued so far, PMSC involved in migration control operate in high-risk contexts, which demand a heightened responsibility to respect human rights, including in terms of how to carry out human rights due diligence and the type of remediation mechanisms that they are required to provide.

Pillar two of the UNGP contains provisions related to the corporate responsibility to respect human rights. UNGP 17, more specifically, refers to human rights due diligence as an ongoingFootnote 65 risk-assessment process that companies are required to carry out—across their operations, products and services, as well as throughout their supplier and business partner networksFootnote 66—in order to “identify, prevent, mitigate and account for how they address their adverse human rights impacts.”Footnote 67 UNGP 17(b) confirms the relevance of ascertaining the severity of the impacts that a company may have and the nature of its operational context, by stating that the complexity of the human rights due diligence process will vary depending on “the size of the business enterprise, the risk of severe human rights impacts, and the nature and context of its operations.”Footnote 68

When examining high-risks contexts, it is important to read UNGP 17 in conjunction with UNGP 23(c), which requires business enterprises to “treat the risk of causing or contributing to gross human rights abuses as a legal compliance issue wherever they operate.”Footnote 69 This means that companies “should treat this risk in the same manner as the risk of involvement in a serious crime, whether or not it is clear that they would be held legally liable.”Footnote 70 The vigilance required of company lawyers is due to the severity of the human rights abuses involved, but also to “the expanding legal boundaries, including territorial boundaries … irrespective of the status of the law where the business activity is taking place.”Footnote 71 UNGP 24 is also relevant in high-risk contexts, as it refers to situations where companies may be unable to address all adverse human rights impacts simultaneously. According to UNGP 24 and related commentary, companies should address all their adverse impacts, but where necessary, they “should first seek to prevent and mitigate those that are most severe or where delayed response would make them irremediable.”Footnote 72 This means that companies should always have a clear and comprehensive understanding of the severity of the abuses that they become involved in and/or contribute to, in terms of scale and scope of the abuses but also in terms of the irremediable nature of the harm. It is important to emphasize that the primary focus of the human rights due diligence process, therefore, is not on the risk to the company, but on the higher risk to which refugees and migrants are exposed throughout migration control operations.Footnote 73 PMSC, therefore, should consider both the likelihood and severity of the risk, and be aware that often the high risk of gross abuses may be so pervasive that it becomes almost impossible for a PMSC not to be involved in them. A joint reading of UNGP 17, UNGP 23 and UNGP 24, therefore, demands that whenever PMSC are involved in high-risk operations, they should not only ascertain the likelihood of their involvement in or contribution to gross abuses, but also prioritize actions to prevent and address the most severe impacts. The continued involvement of PMSC in migration policies of containment and deterrence, therefore, appears to ignore both the home states’ obligation to protect human rights and the companies’ responsibility to respect them, as specifically articulated in the UNGP for high-risk contexts. In the next Section, I explain in more detail how these obligations and responsibilities might help us go beyond the so-called “governance gap” identified in business and human rights and address the accountability gap that continues to characterize business-related abuses in migration control contexts.

C. Heightened Obligations and Heightened Responsibility: Bridging the Accountability Gap in Transnational Migration Control?

I. The Challenge of Attributing Business Conduct to a State

Commentators have discussed the challenges raised by migration control operations in terms of allocation of responsibility for violations of human rights when multiple actors are involved in a breach of international law.Footnote 74 For the purposes of this Article, and as mentioned in Section B, cooperation between states and PMSC in cross-border migration control activities presents an additional layer of complexity because of the non-state actor status of PMSC. Since attribution of conduct is a precondition of state responsibility, attempts have been made at ascertaining whether a non-state actor’s wrongful conduct is attributable to the collaborating state—in our case, usually the state engaging the services of the PMSC or, under certain circumstances, the home state.

The rules on attribution most relevant to our discussion on transnational PMSC’s migration control activities are those under Articles 5 and 8 of the Draft Article on Responsibility of States for International Wrongful Acts (ARSIWA).Footnote 75 As confirmed by paragraphs 2 and 3 of the commentary to Chapter II, on attribution of conduct to a State, the general rule is that the conduct of private persons is not attributable to the state. This is because only the conduct of organs of government of a state or of agents of a state can be attributable. Article 5 ARSIWA, relating to the exercise of certain elements of governmental authority by a non-state actor (a person or entity which is not an organ of the state), is relevant because PMSC often carry out activities which would normally be performed by the state, such as the security and management of detention centers and the provision of essential services to asylum seekers and migrants, for example, services related to health, accommodation, and food. According to Article 5 ARSIWA, such private conduct is only attributable to the state if there is a legal act by the state empowering the non-state actor.

According to paragraph 2 of the commentary to Article 5 ARSIWA, only in special cases the term “entity” may include private companies, and in any case such entity will have to be “empowered by the law of the State to exercise functions of a public character normally exercised by State organs, and the conduct of the entity [must be related] to the exercise of the governmental authority concerned.”Footnote 76 Paragraph 2 also provides the example of private security firms contracted to provide services as prison guards, exercising powers of detention and discipline. Such powers, however, will only be provided by national prison regulations or pertain to the enforcement of a judicial sentence. PMSC’s transnational activities, instead, are usually regulated by contractual agreements stipulated between the state and the company itself. Such contracts will usually not be a sufficient legal instrument to empower the PMSC with governmental authority. This is because the services in which they engage, although they would be normally performed by the state, are not necessarily regulated by law. Immigration detention, for instance, is usually of an administrative nature and as such it will not be covered by regulations pertaining to prisons and detention centers in the criminal justice system.

In the absence of such formal legal empowerment by the state, a PMSC’s conduct can be attributed to the state in accordance with Article 8 ARSIWA if the private non-state actors act on the instructions of, or under the direction or control of a state. Thus, responsibility of the contracting state will only be engaged if it can be proven, either by the wording of the contract or by the facts, that the company acted under the instructions of the state in carrying out the wrongful conduct or that it acted under the direction or control of the state.Footnote 77 Human rights abuses or other wrongful conduct generally fall outside of the substantive scope of such contractual arrangements, so it would be difficult, based on the contract alone, to prove that the PMSC acted under the instruction of the hiring state.Footnote 78 Similarly, the wording of the contract would not be sufficient to prove that the state has otherwise directed or controlled the conduct of the PMSC, since the contract would specify the activities to be carried out, but PMSC are generally quite independent in the planning and execution of their activities. This means that the threshold of state dependence established by Article 8 for attribution of a PMSC’s conduct to the state would usually not be met. Similarly, the conduct of PMSC acting outside of the scope of what has been contractually agreed will also not be attributable to the state.Footnote 79

II. Positive Obligations and Their Evolving Character

It is because of these difficulties in identifying a valid attribution link between the state and the private non-state actor that international legal scholars often turn to the doctrine of positive obligations,Footnote 80 or what in business and human rights terms, as explained in Section B, is referred to as the home state’s obligation to protect from corporate abuse under pillar one of the UNGP. UN Treaty BodiesFootnote 81 have increasingly recognized in their work the relevance of a state’s positive obligations in relation to the conduct of private companies. The Human Rights Committee, which monitors compliance with the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR),Footnote 82 for instance, has referred to positive obligations in relation to two Articles which are of particular relevance for the context of migration control: Article 6 (right to life)Footnote 83 and Article 7 (prohibition of torture, or other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment).Footnote 84 General Comment 36 on the right to life is of specific significance because, at the moment of writing, it is the most recent General Comment issued by the HRC. Despite the fact that General Comments by UN Treaty Bodies are not legally binding instruments, they provide highly authoritative interpretations of the content of the rights and of the legal nature of the obligations enshrined in the relevant international human rights instruments.Footnote 85

Paragraph 21 of General Comment 36 clarifies that state parties to the ICCPR have a “due diligence obligation to take reasonable, positive measures that do not impose disproportionate burdens on them in response to reasonably foreseeable threats to life originating from private persons and entities whose conduct is not attributable to the State.”Footnote 86 Furthermore, adequate protective measures “must be taken to prevent, investigate, punish and remedy arbitrary deprivation of life by private companies, such as private transportation companies, private hospitals, and private security firms.”Footnote 87

At first sight, with the above interpretation, the HRC seems to contradict the commentary to UNGP 2, which claims that states generally do not have an obligation to regulate. This latter approach is put forward by the UNGP despite clear evidence from the work of the UN OHCHR on accountability and effective remedies,Footnote 88 that weak, incoherent, and inconsistent regulation by both home and host states creates legal uncertainties and inefficiency, and imposes additional costs and complexity when it comes to enforcement.Footnote 89 John Ruggie, former UN Special Representative of the Secretary General on issues of business and human rights, and architect of the UNGP, has recently reiterated this stance when addressing concerns expressed in 2019 by Swiss business associations during discussions on national mandatory human rights due diligence. The associations had argued that such a mandatory requirement was in contradiction with the UNGP and had questioned the jurisdiction for legislation on extraterritorial business activities. In his response,Footnote 90 Ruggie explained that legislation requiring businesses to meet their responsibility to respect human rights was not in contradiction with the UNGP. Rather, he argued, UNGP 3 already clarified that states are expected to adopt a regulatory “smart mix” of measures—national and international, voluntary and mandatory—to encourage, support, and incentivize business enterprises. To assuage the concerns expressed by Swiss business associations in relation to legislation with extraterritorial effect, Ruggie also repeated verbatim the content of the commentary to UNGP 2, according to which “under international human rights law states are not generally required to regulate the extraterritorial activities of businesses domiciled in their jurisdiction, but nor are they generally prohibited from doing so provided there is a recognized jurisdictional basis.”Footnote 91 The UNGP, at the same time, acknowledge the progressive work of the UN Treaty Bodies and recognize that the provisions concerning the regulation of transnational business activities pertain to an evolving area of international law.Footnote 92

Some elements of this evolution, it can be argued, are present in the work of the HRC, which interpreted the provisions of Article 2(1) ICCPR, according to which Covenant obligations are owed by a state party to “all individuals within its territory and subject to its jurisdiction,” as meaning all persons over whom it exercises power or effective control. In relation to the right to life, this “includes persons located outside any territory effectively controlled by the State whose right to life is nonetheless affected by its military or other activities in a direct and reasonably foreseeable manner.”Footnote 93 In General Comment 36, the HRC further clarified the situation in which home states of a company have an obligation to regulate, by affirming that state parties

must also take appropriate legislative and other measures to ensure that all activities taking place in whole or in part within their territory and in other places subject to their jurisdiction, but having a direct and reasonably foreseeable impact on the right to life of individuals outside their territory, including activities undertaken by corporate entities based in their territory or subject to their jurisdiction, are consistent with Article 6, taking due account of related international standards of corporate responsibility and of the right of victims to obtain an effective remedy.Footnote 94

The work of the UN Committee on Economic Social and Cultural Rights (CESCR) is also important when it comes to states’ obligations in relation to the business conduct. General Comment 24,Footnote 95 in particular, explicitly states that the obligation to protect also applies extraterritorially, requiring states to “take steps to prevent and redress infringements of Covenant rights that occur outside their territories due to the activities of business entities over which they can exercise control, especially in cases where the remedies available to victims before domestic courts of the state where the harm occurs are unavailable or ineffective.”Footnote 96

The reference to the exercise of control over business entities operating abroad contained in General Comment 24 is reminiscent of Article 8 ARSIWA, but at paragraph 32 the CESCR clarifies that, although state responsibility for the wrongful conduct of private non-state actors is only engaged when such conduct can be attributed to the state, states would be in breach of their human rights obligations “where the violation reveals a failure by the State to take reasonable measures that could have prevented the occurrence of the event.”Footnote 97 In the CESCR’s view, it is thus possible to engage the responsibility of the state “even if other causes have also contributed to the occurrence of the violation, and even if the State had not foreseen that a violation would occur, provided such a violation was reasonably foreseeable.”Footnote 98 In such cases, the responsibility of the state does not arise for the abuse that a company has caused or contributed to, but for the state’s failure to protect from such abuse when the state knew or ought to have known of its likely occurrence, but failed to take reasonable steps to prevent it. The obligation to protect, predicated upon this lower threshold of foreseeability, is a due diligence obligation vested upon the state, and as such an obligation of conduct rather than of result.Footnote 99

The CESCR is not alone in advancing this understanding of extraterritorial obligations. Tilmann Altwicker, for instance, refers to this extraterritorial obligation to protect as “the external dimension of a transnational obligation to protect,” which in his view was already identifiable in the International Law Commission Draft Articles on the Prevention of Transboundary Harm from Hazardous Activities.Footnote 100 Under Article 3 of such Draft Articles, when lawful hazardous activities are planned or carried out in the territory of a state or otherwise under the jurisdiction or control of a state,Footnote 101 the latter is under an obligation to “take all appropriate measures to prevent significant transboundary harm or at any event to minimize the risk thereof.”Footnote 102 This includes hazardous transboundary activities conducted by private persons or enterprises in which case a state is required to establish and implement an appropriate regulatory framework rather than get involved in a company’s operational issues.Footnote 103

Similarly, the Committee on the Rights of the Child (CRC Committee)Footnote 104 refers to the need to identify “a reasonable link between the State and the conduct concerned”Footnote 105 when it comes to an obligation to enable access to an effective remedy, judicial and non-judicial, when rights are violated by business enterprises abroad. As examples of measures suitable to prevent the infringement of children’s rights by companies operating abroad, the CRC Committee includes making state support, such as public finance and insurance, conditional on a business carrying out appropriate and effective human rights due diligence and recommends the vetting of a company’s prior record on children’s rights.Footnote 106

III. Positive Obligations in High-Risk Contexts

As I have explained in Section B, it is at this juncture that the conceptualization of PMSC’s involvement in migration control activities as “high-risk” operations becomes particularly useful, especially to overcome potential issues of jurisdiction. Legal scholars and practitioners continue to disagree over whether and when a state’s obligation to protect from third parties’ interference with the enjoyment of human rights applies to transnational activities.Footnote 107 The main obstacle to the application of a state’s obligation to protect, in some cases, remains the issue of jurisdiction, that is to say the applicability of the relevant international legal instrument in which the obligation is enshrined. As seen above, on the one hand, state parties to a human rights treaty that contains a jurisdiction clause, such as the ICCPR, the Convention on the Rights of the Child, or the European Convention on Human Rights, have obligations when they have effective control over a territory (spatial mode of jurisdiction) or over a person (personal mode of jurisdiction).Footnote 108 The CESCR, on the other hand, interprets the obligations under the ICESCR as being “without any restriction linked to territory or jurisdiction.”Footnote 109

It is important to note that the debate over the obligation to regulate mainly concerns general duties, rather than specific duties applicable in high-risk situations where obligations and responsibilities, as explained in Section B, are understood as having a heightened character. Very much in line with the interpretations of the UN Treaty Bodies, the UNGP confirm that high-risk contexts, such as the ones pertaining to the implementation of migration policies and the involvement of PMSC therein, demand the special engagement of home states. They require appropriate regulation aimed at preventing business-related abuse and stopping the abuse that is identified and already occurring. The high risk of gross abuses taking place in migration control contexts means that a failure by the home state to take appropriate steps to protect individuals from abuse which is reasonably foreseeable, wherever this abuse may occur, would amount to a breach of its positive obligation to protect. PMSC, in turn, have a heightened responsibility to respect human rights and treat the risk of gross abuses as a legal compliance issue, that is to say, in the same manner as they would treat the risk of being involved in a serious crime, irrespective of whether this is prescribed by law where the business activity is taking place. Regulation of transnational business conduct is important because when it comes to PMSC’s involvement in migration control, especially in the contemporary context of containment and deterrence, the individuals suffering abuse are hardly ever within the territory of the state contracting with the PMSC or within the territory of the PMSC’s home state. Most commonly, in transnational migration control operations the individual is located outside of the territory of the relevant state and the unlawful conduct of the PMSC, when it occurs, cannot be easily attributed to the state.Footnote 110 To obviate situations in which states purposely cooperate with other states or with private non-state actors in order to exploit the jurisdictional threshold and circumvent responsibility, scholars have called for a functional approach to jurisdiction.Footnote 111 This approach is based on the fact that indirect perpetration of an international wrong, that is to say a breach by proxy, would also incur responsibility.Footnote 112 It remains to be seen, however, whether courts will find this functional approach to jurisdiction persuasive enough for them to adopt it. In the meantime, the “smart mix” identified by the UNGP, including its specific approach to high-risk areas examined in this Article, offers a possible alternative perspective.

As mentioned above, there is evidence of a certain willingness to regulate on the part of both home and host states, but their efforts often remain incoherent and inconsistent.Footnote 113 This leads to challenges in ensuring the right to an effective remedy envisaged both in international legal instrumentsFootnote 114 and in the UNGP (pillar 3).Footnote 115 The home states of PMSC involved in migration control contexts have also proven to be reluctant to regulate transnational business conduct, as they are usually the very states that have a vested interest in strengthening migration control and in collaborating with other states or private actors to circumvent state responsibility. A reclassification of migration control activities outsourced to PMSC as high-risk operations for the application of the UNGP can help forestall objections to the existence of a home state’s obligation to regulate the transnational activities of its PMSC. Because transnational migration control operations entail a high risk of gross human rights abuses, the UNGP clearly direct us to identify the nature and scope of the heightened obligations vested upon the home states of the PMSC, and the heightened responsibility pertaining to the PMSC themselves. Through a close analysis not only of the provisions in UNGP 7, 17(b), 23(c), and 24 discussed in Section B, but also of recent developments in international law and interpretations provided by the UN Treaty Bodies, it is apparent that the existence of heightened obligations and responsibility applicable in high-risk situations is broadly acknowledged. Such heightened obligations and responsibilities are due to the foreseeability of the harm and ability of the state to prevent it, as well as to the grossness of the abuses and the likelihood of their occurrence in such contexts.

Heightened home states’ obligations to protect entail, at a minimum, a duty to regulate the transnational activities of PMSC domiciled within a state’s territory, and/or under its jurisdiction. Such regulation must be aimed at effectively preventing PMSC from causing, or contributing to, human rights abuses in the course of their transnational operations, as clarified by UN Treaty Bodies and as suggested by a joint reading of UNGP 7, 17(b), 23(c), and 24. This would include the introduction, in the relevant domestic legal framework (pillar one), of mandatory human rights due diligence for PMSC involved in migration control (pillar two), and the provision of effective remedies for the harm deriving from the wrongful conduct of the PMSC (pillar three). Effective remedies would include, inter alia, providing access to the courts of the home state of the PMSC, especially when the courts of the host states are unable to provide effective remedies or are otherwise inaccessible to the victims; and imposing civil and criminal liability on PMSC for their wrongful conduct. Failure to regulate the transnational activities of PMSC would result in a breach of the home state’s obligation to protect from reasonably foreseeable human rights abuses by the PMSC, that is to say a breach of a positive obligation to protect.

Meaningful regulation will have to specify the type of mandatory human rights due diligence required of PMSC and create a system whereby state support to the PMSC—including continued registration and incorporation in the home state—would be made conditional to detailed reporting, auditing and corrective action whenever abuses are identified. PMSC involved in migration control operations also have a heightened responsibility to treat the risk of gross human rights abuses as a legal compliance issue and thus engage in ongoing monitoring and assessment of how they adversely impact human rights. Accordingly, they must also publicly notify harm when encountered and promptly intervene to prevent abuses or stop them if they are already occurring.

Anything short of this heightened approach would hollow out the significance of the UNGP in high-risk situations. Most importantly, a heightened approach would also engage the responsibility of the home state for a failure of its obligation to protect and trigger a requirement to remedy such breach. Non-compliance by the PMSC, in turn, would lead to civil and criminal liability in the relevant domestic frameworks. PMSC, therefore, rather than continuing to actively contribute to border securitization and lobby for increasingly militarized responses to migration flows,Footnote 116 will have to legally reconsider whether their engagement in migration control is indeed possible without incurring civil and criminal liability. Articulated in this way, heightened obligations and responsibility could start to obviate jurisdictional issues and complement current approaches to the doctrine of positive obligations. This could offer a possible solution to ensuring both state and corporate responsibility.

D. Conclusion

In this Article, I have argued that the UNGP recognize the existence of heightened state obligations and business responsibility in contexts characterized by a high risk of gross human rights abuses. This risk does not only characterize conflict-affected areas, but also complex situations in which PMSC often find themselves carrying out their activities, including within the context of migration control.

After clarifying that, for the purposes of the application of the UNGP, migration control contexts involve a high-risk of business involvement in gross human rights abuses, I have examined how this reclassification results in heightened obligations of home states and heightened responsibility of PMSC, as envisaged by the UNGP. I have further argued that heightened home state obligations mean, at a minimum, an obligation to regulate the transnational activities of PMSC domiciled within a home state’s territory to prevent them from causing, or contributing to, transnational human rights harm, and provide redress when such harm occurs. As also confirmed by recent developments in the work of UN Human Rights Treaty Bodies, home states are required to introduce mandatory human rights due diligence and provide effective remedies for the harm deriving from the wrongful conduct of the PMSC. Effective remedies would include providing access to the courts of the home state of the PMSC and imposing civil and criminal liability on PMSC for their wrongful conduct.

The UNGP also acknowledge that, in situations in which there is a high risk of gross abuses, home states are under an obligation to meaningfully regulate the transnational activities of PMSC domiciled in their territory. Failure to regulate would result in a breach of the home state’s obligation to protect from foreseeable human rights abuses by PMSC, i.e., a breach of a positive obligation to protect.

A reconceptualization of migration control operations as high-risk contexts may prove useful to bridge the accountability gap that usually characterizes corporate human rights abuses resulting from the cooperation between states and private non-state actors such as PMSC, including in contexts of transnational migration control. As I have argued, when it comes to high-risk contexts, the UNGP can be an alternative tool to recent calls for a functional approach to jurisdiction and a complementary instrument when implementing the doctrine of positive obligations.

Footnotes

*

Daria Davitti is Postdoctoral Researcher at Lund University, Faculty of Law and Assistant Professor at the University of Nottingham, School of Law. The research leading to this Article was presented at a workshop on “Accountability for Human Rights Violations in Migration Control” organized at the Refugee Studies Centre, University of Oxford in November 2018. The workshop was funded by the European Research Council under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation program (ERC Starter Grant RefMig, Grant Agreement 716968, PI Cathryn Costello). Unless otherwise stated, all websites were last visited January 15, 2020.

References

1 Jens Vedsted-Hansen, Privatiseret retshåndhævelse og kontrol, in Ret Og Privatisering 159, 173–75 (Lin Adrian et al. eds., 1995) as referenced in Thomas Gammeltoft-Hansen, Private Actor Involvement in Migration Management, in The Practice of shared responsibility in international law 527 (André Nollkaemper & Ilias Plakokefalos eds., 2017).

2 Gammeltoft-Hansen, supra note 1, at 531–33.

3 See Tilman Rodenhäuser, Another Brick in the Wall: Carrier Sanctions and the Privatization of Migration Control, 26 Int’l J. Refugee L. 223, 226 (2014) (tracing the emergence of certain forms of carrier sanctions to the introduction of the 1902 United States Passenger Act and, later, the 1952 MacCarran-Walter Act, Section 273). See also Aristide Zolberg, Matters of State: Theorizing Immigration Policies, in The Handbook of International Migration: The American Experience 75 (1999).

4 See Federica Infantino, Schengen Visa Implementation and Transnational Policymaking: Bordering Europe 35–65 (2019). See also Maarten den Heijer, Visas and Non-discrimination, 20 Eur. J. Migration & L. 470, 479 (2018); Federica Infantino, Outsourcing Border Control: Politics and Practice of Contracted Visa Policy in Morocco 61–81 (2016).

5 Theodore Baird, Who Is Responsible for Harm in Immigration Detention? Models of Accountability for Private Corporations (Glob. Det. Project, Working Paper No. 11, 2016), https://www.globaldetentionproject.org/who-is-responsible-for-harm-in-immigration-detention-models-of-accountability-for-private-corporations. See also Matthew Flynn, Bureaucratic Capitalism and the Immigration Detention Complex (Glob. Det. Project, Working Paper No. 9, 2015), https://www.globaldetentionproject.org/bureaucratic-capitalism-and-the-immigration-detention-complex.

6 See Adam Fabry, The Political Economy of Hungary: From State Capitalism to Authoritarian Neoliberalism, 128–40 (2019) (discussing paramilitary groups deployed along the Hungarian-Serbian border).

7 I adopt the term PMSC, instead of Private Security Contractor (or PSC), as defined in the Montreux Document definition:

PMSCs are private business entities that provide military and/or security services, irrespective of how they describe themselves. Military and security services include, in particular, armed guarding and protection of persons and objects, such as convoys, buildings and other places; maintenance and operation of weapons systems; prisoner detention; and advice to or training of local forces and security personnel.

See Montreux Document: On Pertinent International Legal Obligations and Good Practices for States Related to Operations of Private Military and Security Companies during Armed Conflict, Sep. 17, 2008, Int’l Comm. of the Red Cross and Swiss Fed. Gov., https://www.icrc.org/en/doc/assets/files/other/icrc_002_0996.pdf. The term PMSC also reflects the fact that they can use force in self-defense, thus contributing to the securitization of migration control, as further discussed in this Article. The terms companies, business, and business enterprises are also used interchangeably to refer to PMSC, in line with the common usage in business and human rights.

8 Daria Davitti, The Rise of Private Military and Security Companies in European Migration Policies: Implications under the UNGPs, 4 Bus. & Hum. Rts. J. 33, 36 (2019).

9 Matthias Leese, Standardizing Security: The Business Case Politics of Borders, 13 Mobilities 261, 268 (2018). See also Myriam Dunn Cavelty & Matthias Leese, Politicizing Security at the Boundaries: Privacy and Surveillance and Cybersecurity, 5 Eur. Rev. Int’l Stud. 49, 56 (2018).

10 Jane Lethbridge, Privatisation of Migration and Refugee Services and Other Forms of State Disengagement, Public Services International Research Unit, Mar. 11 2017, http://www.world-psi.org/en/privatisation-migration-refugee-services-other-forms-state-disengagement.

11 See Martina Tazzioli, Refugees’ Debit Cards, Subjectivities and Data Circuits: Financial Humanitarianism in the Greek Migration Laboratory, 13 Int’l Pol. Soc. 4 (2019), https://academic.oup.com/ips/advance-article/doi/10.1093/ips/olz014/5539660. See also Russ Juskalian, Inside the Jordan Refugee Camp that Runs on Blockchain, MIT Tech. Rev., Apr. 12, 2018, https://www.technologyreview.com/s/610806/inside-the-jordan-refugee-camp-that-runs-on-blockchain/.

12 U.N. Human Rights Council, Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights: Implementing the United Nations’ Protect, Respect and Remedy Framework, U.N. Doc. A/17/31 (Mar. 21, 2011) [hereinafter UNGP].

13 Davitti, supra note 8, at 42–8.

14 Id. at 17 (focusing on UNGP 17(b) in particular). See also U.N. Office of the High Comm’r for Human Rights (OHCHR), Mandate of the Working Group on the Issue of Human Rights and Transnational Corporations and Other Business Enterprises, Statement on the implications of the Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights in the context of Israeli settlements in the Occupied Palestinian Territory 9 (June 6, 2014). See Andreas Graff & Andrea Iff, Respecting Human Rights in Conflict Regions: How to Avoid the Conflict Spiral, 2 Bus. & Hum. Rts. J. 109, 111 (2017); Joylon Ford, Regulating Business for Peace: The United Nations, the Private Sector and Post-Conflict Recovery 45–48 (2015).

15 Frequently Asked Questions about the Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights, Annex I, Key Concepts in the Guiding Principles 41, OHCHR (2014), https://www.ohchr.org/Documents/Publications/FAQ_PrinciplesBussinessHR.pdf [hereinafter OHCHR FAQs].

16 See Annick Pijnenburg, Containment Instead of Refoulement: Shifting State Responsibility in the Age of Cooperative Migration Control?, Hum. Rts. L. Rev. (forthcoming 2020). See also Annick Pijnenburg et al., Controlling Migration through International Cooperation, 20 Eur. J. Migration & L. 365, 369 (2018); Thomas Gammeltoft-Hansen & James Hathaway, Non-refoulement in a World of Cooperative Deterrence, 53 Colum. J. Transnat’l L. 235 (2015).

17 These principles are particularly relevant to conflict-affected and high-risk contexts. As further examined in this Article, UNGP 7 clarifies what states should do to help ensure that business enterprises operating in conflict-affected and high-risk contexts are not involved in human rights abuses. The measures indicated in UNGP 7 are “in addition to State’s obligations under international humanitarian law in situations of armed conflict, and under international criminal law.” UNGP 17 to 23 directly address the process of human rights due diligence, but more specifically UNGP 17(b) indicates that human rights due diligence will vary in complexity depending on “the size of the business enterprise, the risk of severe human rights impacts, and the nature and context of its operations.” UNGP 23(c) clarifies that, in all contexts, companies “should treat the risk of causing or contributing to gross human rights abuses as a legal compliance issue wherever they operate” (emphasis added). UNGP 24 provides guidance on how companies should prioritize actions to address actual and potential adverse human rights impacts, whenever it may not be possible to address all human rights impacts simultaneously. Conflict-affected and high-risk contexts are often considered so complex as to require the prioritization of most severe impacts, as indicated in UNGP 24.

18 See, e.g., Kamasaee v Commonwealth of Australia & Ors, [2014] 6770 CLR (Austl.) (settlement of proceedings finalized on July 6, 2018), https://www.supremecourt.vic.gov.au/court-decisions/case-list/manus-island-detention-centre-class-action (illustrating a situation of human rights abuses culminating in a class action suit against the Commonwealth of Australia and two corporate contractors operating the immigration detention center on Manus Islands). See Gabrielle Holly, Transnational Tort and Access to Remedy under the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights: Kamasaee v. Commonwealth, 19 Melbourne J. Int’l L. 52 (2018) (discussing Kamasaee v. Commonwealth and how the case was eventually settled without admission of liability). For other examples of PMSC involvement in human rights abuses, see Martin Lemberg Pedersen, Private Security Companies and the EU Borders, in The Migration Industry and the Commercialization of International Migration 152, 166 (2013). See also Lethbridge, supra note 10, at 531–33; Michael Flynn, From Bare Life to Bureaucratic Capitalism: Analyzing the Growth of the Immigration Detention Industry as a Complex Organization, 8 Contemp. Readings L. & Soc. Just. 70 (2016).

19 See U.N. Human Rights Council, Improving Accountability and Access to Remedy for Victims of Business-Related Human Rights Abuse: The Relevance of Human Rights Due Diligence to Determinations of Corporate Liability, U.N. Doc. A/Add.2/38/20 (June 1, 2018) (discussing a few exceptions in the emerging regulations at the national and regional levels) [hereinafter OHCHR Accountability and Remedy Project I]. The evidence shows that there is still room for improvement, as evidenced by the Accountability and Remedy Project I by the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights.

20 See Lottie Lane, The Horizontal Effect of International Human Rights Law in Practice, 5 Eur. J. Comp. L. & Governance 5, 21–24 (2018) (discussing developments towards direct horizontal effect through the jurisprudence of various national legal systems).

21 See, e.g., Olivier De Schutter, Towards a New Treaty on Business and Human Rights, 1 Bus. & Hum. Rts. J. 41 (2016); Sara Seck, Home State Responsibility and Local Communities: The Case of Global Mining, 11 Yale Hum. Rts. & Dev. L.J. 178 (2008); Robert McCorquodale & Penelope Simons, Responsibility Beyond Borders: State Responsibility for Extraterritorial Violations by Corporations of International Human Rights Law, 70 Mod. L. Rev. 598 (2007).

22 Ana Aliverti, Sanja Milivojevic & Leanne Weber, Tracing Imprints of the Border in the Territorial, Justice and Welfare Domains: A Multi-Site Ethnography, 58 How. J. Crime & Crim. Just. 240 (2019). See also Faye Donnelly, In the Name of (De)securitization: Speaking Security to Protect Migrants, Refugees and Internally Displaced Persons?, 99 Int’l Rev. Red Cross 241 (2017).

23 Reece Jones & Corey Johnson, Border Militarisation and the Re-articulation of Sovereignty, 41 Transactions Inst. of British Geographers 187 (2016).

24 Jean-Pierre Cassarino, Beyond the Criminalisation of Migration: A Non-Western Perspective, 4 Int’l J. Migration & Border Stud. 397, 404 (2018). See also Jean-Pierre Cassarino, Informalising EU Readmission Cooperation, 42 Routledge Handbook Just. & Home Affairs Res. 83, 92 (2017).

25 The Corporate Responsibility to Respect Human Rights: An Interpretive Guide 17–18, OHCHR (2012), http://www.ohchr.org/Documents/Publications/HR.PUB.12.2_En.pdf. See also International Business Leaders Forum, Human Rights Translated: A Business Reference Guide, OHCHR (2008), https://www2.ohchr.org/english/issues/globalization/business/docs/Human_Rights_Translated_web.pdf.

26 See Lauren Martin, Carceral Mobility and Flexible Territoriality in Immigration Enforcement, in Handbook on Critical Geography of Migration 244, 245–51 (Katharyne Mitchell et al. eds., 2019) (providing an overview of the US immigration detention system and its privatization).

27 Grace Meng, Holding Companies Accountable for US Detention Abuses, Human Rights Watch (Nov. 25, 2019), https://www.hrw.org/news/2019/11/25/holding-companies-accountable-us-detention-abuses-0.

28 See Michael Flynn, The Debate over ‘Alternatives’ to Immigration-related Detention of Children, in Migrations, State Obligations, and Rights in a Globalized Context, at 115–17 (Global Studies Institute, University of Geneva, forthcoming 2020) (critiquing alternatives to immigration detention). See also Robyn Sampson, The Biopolitics of Alternatives to Immigration Detention, in Handbook on Critical Geographies of Migration 258–62 (Katharyne Mitchell et al. eds., 2019).

29 Michael Hauser, The High Price of Freedom for Migrants in Detention, The New Yorker, (March 12, 2019), https://www.newyorker.com/news/news-desk/the-high-price-of-freedom-for-migrants-in-detention. See also Inti Pacheco et al., Company That Bails Out Immigrants Is Accused of Abusive and Fraudulent Tactics, Univision News (May 1, 2018), https://www.univision.com/univision-news/immigration/company-that-bails-out-immigrants-is-accused-of-abusive-and-fraudulent-tactics.

30 Fact Sheet: Electronic Monitoring Devices as Alternatives to Detention, National Immigration Forum (Feb. 22, 2019), https://immigrationforum.org/article/fact-sheet-electronic-monitoring-devices-as-alternatives-to-detention/. See also Daniella Silva, GPS Tracking of Immigrants in ICE Raids Troubles Advocates, NBC News (Aug. 15, 2019), https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/gps-tracking-immigrants-ice-raids-troubles-advocates-n1042846. See CRS Report, Immigration: Alternative to Detention Programs, Every CRS Report (July 8, 2019), https://www.everycrsreport.com/reports/R45804.html (discussing facial recognition systems to confirm identity and monitor movement have also been tried as an alternative to immigration detention).

32 See Office of Inspector General, US Department of Homeland Security, Management Alert: DHS Needs to Address Dangerous Overcrowding and Prolonged Detention of Children and Adults in the Rio Grande Valley (Redacted) (July 2, 2019), https://www.oig.dhs.gov/sites/default/files/assets/2019-07/OIG-19-51-Jul19_.pdf. See also Alison G.S. Knox, Administrative Failures: The Immigration Detention Centers and Abu Ghraib Prison, 95 Int’l Soc. Sci. Rev. 17 (2019), https://digitalcommons.northgeorgia.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1359&context=iss; Kate Swanson, Silent Killing: The Inhumanity of US Immigration Detention, 18 J. Latin Am. Geo. 176 (2019); Sarah A. MacLean et al., Mental Health of Children Held at a United States Immigration Detention Center, 230 Soc. Sci. & Med. 303 (2019); Simon Romero et al., Hungry, Scared and Sick: Inside the Migrant Detention Center in Clint, Tex., N.Y. Times (July 9, 2019), https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2019/07/06/us/migrants-border-patrol-clint.html.

33 Due Diligence: Defining ‘Conflict-Affected’ and ‘High-Risk Areas’, OHCHR (2013), https://www.ohchr.org/Documents/Issues/Business/ForumSession2/Events/3Dec.1.SideEventProposal_GenevaAcademy.pdf.

34 Conflict-Affected and High-Risk Areas (CAHRAs), Responsible Minerals Initiative, http://www.responsiblemineralsinitiative.org/emerging-risks/conflict-affected-and-high-risk-areas/.

35 Id.

36 Guidance on Responsible Business in Conflict-Affected & High-Risk Areas: A Resource for Companies and Investors 7, UN Global Compact (2010), https://www.unglobalcompact.org/docs/issues_doc/Peace_and_Business/Guidance_RB.pdf (emphasis added).

37 Memorandum d’intesa sulla cooperazione nel campo dello sviluppo, del contrasto all’immigrazione illegale, al traffico di esseri umani, al contrabbando e sul rafforzamento della sicurezza delle frontiere tra lo Stato della Libia e la Repubblica Italiana, http://itra.esteri.it/vwPdf/wfrmRenderPdf.aspx?ID=50975.

38 Ylenia Gostoli, Anti-migration deal between Italy and Libya renewed, Al Jazeera (Nov. 2 2019), https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2019/11/deal-curb-migrant-arrivals-italy-libya-renewed-191102122821537.html.

39 Mark Akkerman, Border Wars, The Arms Dealers Profiting from Europe’s Refugee Tragedy 28 (2016), http://www.stopwapenhandel.org/sites/stopwapenhandel.org/files/Border-Wars-Report-web1207.pdf. See also Libya Buys Border Control System from SELEX, Defense Industry Daily (Oct. 12, 2009), http://www.defenseindustrydaily.com/Libya-Buys-Border-Control-System-from-SELEX-05846/.

40 Hirsi Jamaa and Others v. Italy, App. No. 27765/09, para. 107 (Feb. 23, 2012), http://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-109231.

41 Id. at para. 131.

42 OHCHR, Desperate and Dangerous: Report on the Human Rights Situation of Migrants and Refugees in Libya (Dec. 20, 2018) https://www.ohchr.org/Documents/Countries/LY/LibyaMigrationReport.pdf. See also OHCHR, Abuse Behind Bars: Arbitrary and Unlawful Detention in Libya (Apr. 10, 2018), http://www.ohchr.org/Documents/Countries/LY/AbuseBehindBarsArbitraryUnlawful_EN.pdf; U.N. G.A., Unlawful Death of Refugees and Migrants: Report of the Special Rapporteur of the Human Rights Council on Extrajudicial, Summary or Arbitrary Executions, Agnes Callamard, U.N. Doc. A/72/335 (Aug. 15, 2017).

43 UNGP, supra note 12.

44 See Jennifer Zerk, Corporate Liability for Gross Human Rights Abuses: Towards a Fairer and More Effective System of Domestic Law Remedies 28 (2013), https://www.ohchr.org/Documents/Issues/Business/DomesticLawRemedies/StudyDomesticeLawRemedies.pdf (citing Economic and Social Council, Commission on Human Rights, Sub-Commission on the Prevention of Discrimination and Protection of Minorities, Report of the Independent Expert on the Right to Restitution, Compensation and Rehabilitation for Victims of Grave Violations of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, Mr. M. Cherif Bassiouni, submitted pursuant to Commission on Human Rights Resolution 1998/43, U.N. Doc. E/CN.4/Sub.2/1999/65, para 85).

45 OHCHR FAQs, supra note 15.

46 OHCHR FAQs, supra note 15.

47 OHCHR FAQs, supra note 15, at 8.

48 See supra note 31.

49 Emblematic are the effects of EU migration policies in the Sahel and West Africa, of US policies in Latin America and elsewhere, and of Australian policies in Indonesia and Papua New Guinea. See respectively Ana Uzelac, Incoherent Agendas: Do European Union Migration Policies Threaten Regional Integration in West Africa? (Cilngendael Policy Brief, June 2019), https://www.clingendael.org/sites/default/files/2019-06/Policy_Brief_EU_Migration_Policies_Threat_Integration_West_Africa.pdf; Fransje Molenaar & Floor El Kamouni-Janssen, Turning the Tide: The Politics of Irregular Migration in the Sahel and Libya (Clingendael Online Report, 2017), https://www.clingendael.org/publication/turning-tide; Todd Miller, Empire of Borders: The Expansion of the US Border Around the World 167–247 (2019); Asher Lazarus Hirsch & Cameron Doig, Outsourcing Control: The International Organization for Migration in Indonesia, 22 Int’l J. Hum. Rts. 681 (2018).

50 See Todd Miller, More Than a Wall: Corporate Profiteering and the Militarization of US Borders (Transnational Institute 2019), https://www.tni.org/files/publication-downloads/more-than-a-wall-report.pdf; Mark Akkerman, Expanding the Fortress: The Policies, the Profiteers and the People Shaped by EU’s Border Externalisation Programme (Transnational Institute 2018), https://www.tni.org/files/publication-downloads/expanding_the_fortress_-_1.6_may_11.pdf.

51 Ruben Andersson, No Go World: How Fear is Redrawing Our Maps and Infecting Our Politics 119–38 (2019).

52 Ben Bowling & Sophie Westenra, A Really Hostile Environment: Adiaphorization, Global Policing and the Crimmigration Control System, Theoretical Criminology (June 1, 2018), https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1177/1362480618774034. See also Ruben Andersson, Rescued and Caught: The Humanitarian-Security Nexus at Europe’s Frontiers, in The Borders of ‘Europe’: Autonomy of Migration, Tactics of Bordering 64, 89 (Nicholas De Genova ed., 2017).

53 UNGP, supra note 12, at Principle 7 and related commentary.

54 UNGP, supra note 12, at Principle 7 and related commentary.

55 John Ruggie (Special Representative of the Secretary General on the issue of human rights and transnational corporations and other business enterprises), Business and Human Rights in Conflict-Affected Regions: Challenges and Options for State Responses, U.N. Doc. A/17/32 (May 27, 2011).

56 Id. at para 10.

57 UNGP, supra note 12, at Principles 14, 16, 17, 21.

58 Radu Mares, Corporate and State Responsibilities in Conflict-Affected Areas, 83 Nordic J. Int’l L. 293, 311 (2014).

59 Ruggie, supra note 55, at para. 13.

60 UNGP, supra note 12, at Principle 7 and related commentary.

61 See, e.g., Geetanjali Ganguly et al., If at First You Don’t Succeed: Suing Corporations for Climate Change, 38 Oxford J. Legal Stud. 841 (2018). See also Daria Davitti, Refining the Protect, Respect and Remedy Framework for Business and Human Rights and its Guiding Principles, 16 Hum. Rts. L. Rev. 55 (2016).

62 See UNGP, supra note 12, at Commentary to UNGP 25 (discussing pillar three on effective remedies: “Unless States take appropriate steps to investigate, punish and redress business-related human rights abuses when they do occur, the State duty to protect can be rendered weak or even meaningless.”). See also OHCHR FAQs, supra note 15, at 26 (reiterating that “[s]tates have the primary obligation to enact and enforce laws and policies that have the effect of requiring companies to respect human rights” and that a company’s “responsibility to respect human rights applies even where such legislation is lacking or not effectively enforced”).

63 Zerk, supra note 44, at 62.

64 UNGP supra note 12, at Principles 17–21 and related commentary.

65 UNGP supra note 12, at Principle 17(c).

66 UNGP supra note 12, at Principle 17(a). See also, OHCHR FAQs, supra note 15, at 27.

67 UNGP supra note 12, at Principle 17 and related commentary.

68 UNGP, supra note 12, at Principle 17(b).

69 UNGP, supra note 12, at Principle 23(c) and related commentary (emphasis added).

70 OHCHR Interpretive Guide, supra note 25. See also, John Sherman III, The UN Guiding Principles: Practical Implications for Business Lawyers, In-House Def. Q. 50, 50, 55 (Jan. 2013), https://www.shiftproject.org/resources/publications/un-guiding-principles-practical-implications-business-lawyers/ [hereinafter OHCHR Interpretive Guide].

71 OHCHR Interpretive Guide, supra note 25.

72 UNGP, supra note 12, at Principle 24.

73 UNGP, supra note 12, at Principle 24 (showing that the commentary to Principle 17 explicitly states that human rights due diligence must go “beyond identifying and managing risk to the company itself, to include risk to rights-holders”).

74 See Daniel Ghezelbash et al., Securitization of Search and Rescue at Sea: The Response to Boat Migration in the Mediterranean and Offshore Australia, 67 Int’l & Comp. L.Q. 315 (2018); Melanie Fink, A ‘Blind Spot’ in the Framework of International Responsibility? Third-Party Responsibility for Human Rights Violation: The Case of Frontex, in Human Rights and the Dark Side of Globalization: Transnational Law Enforcement and Migration Control 272 (2016). See also Efthymios Papastavridis, Recent Non-Entrée Policies in the Central Mediterranean and Their Legality: A New Form of Refoulement?, 3 Diritti Umani e Diritto Internazionale 493 (2018); Azadeh Dastyari & Asher Hirsch, The Ring of Steel: Extraterritorial Migration Control in Indonesia and Libya and the Complicity of Australia and Italy, 19 Hum. Rts. L. Rev. 433 (2019).

75 Report of the International Law Commission on the Work of Its Fifty-Third Session, [2001] 2 Y.B. Int’l L. Comm’n 31, at para. 2, U.N. Doc. A/CN.4/SER.A/2001/Add.1., https://legal.un.org/ilc/publications/yearbooks/english/ilc_2001_v2_p2.pdf.

76 Id.

77 Id. at 47, para. 1.

78 Carsten Hoppe, Passing the Buck: State Responsibility for Private Military Companies, 19 Eur. J. Int’l L. 989, 992 (2008). See also Hannah Tonkin, State Control Over Private Military and Security Companies, 80–122 (2012).

79 Report of the International Law Commission, supra note 75, at 48, para. 8 (explaining that “in general a State, in giving lawful instructions to persons who are not its organs, does not assume the risk that the instructions will be carried out in an internationally wrongful way. On the other hand, where persons or groups have committed acts under the effective control of a State, the condition for attribution will still be met even if particular instructions may have been ignored”).

80 Maarten den Heijer, Europe and Extraterritorial Asylum 93–101 (2012). See also Monica Hakimi, State Bystander Responsibility, 21 Eur. J. Int’l L. 341 (2010).

81 Whilst the work of regional human rights bodies is not examined in this Article, their significant contribution to the doctrine of positive obligations is widely recognized in existing literature. See, e.g., Angus Campbell, Positive Obligations under the ECHR: Deprivation of Liberty by Private Actors, 10 Edinburgh L. Rev. 399 (2006); Laurens Lavrysen, Positive Obligations in the Jurisprudence of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights, 7 Inter-American & Eur. Hum. Rts. J. 94 (2014).

82 International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, Dec. 16, 1966, 999 U.N.T.S. 171 [hereinafter ICCPR].

83 U.N. Human Rights Committee (HRC), General Comment No. 36, Article 6: Right to Life, U.N. Doc. CCPR/C/GC/36 (Sept. 3, 2019).

84 U.N. Human Rights Committee (HRC), General Comment No. 20, Article 7, Prohibition of torture, or other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment, U.N. Doc. HRI/GEN/1/Rev.9 (Vol. I) (Mar. 10, 1992).

85 The International Court of Justice (ICJ) held that “great weight” should be ascribed “to the interpretation adopted by this independent body [the HRC] that was established specifically to supervise the application of that treaty [ICCPR].” See Ahmadou Sadio Diallo (Guinea v. Dem. Rep. Congo), Judgment, 2010 I.C.J. Rep. 369, ¶ 66. By analogy, the same approach is also appropriate in relation to the work of other UN Treaty Bodies.

86 General Comment No. 36, supra note 83, at para. 21.

87 General Comment No. 36, supra note 83, at para. 21.

88 See U.N. Office of the High Comm’r for Human Rights, OHCHR Accountability and Remedy Project I, Enhancing Effectiveness of Judicial Mechanisms in Cases of Business-Related Human Rights Abuse, https://www.ohchr.org/EN/Issues/Business/Pages/ARP_I.aspx; U.N. High Comm’r for Human Rights, Improving Accountability and Access to Remedy for Victims of Business-Related Human Rights Abuse, U.N. Doc. A/HRC/32/19 (May 10, 2016).

89 OHCHR, U.N. Doc. A/HRC/32/19, supra note 88, at para. 30.

90 Letter from John Gerald Ruggie, Affiliated Profesor in International Legal Studies, Harvard Law School, to Saskia Wilks and Johannes Blankenbach, Business and Human Rights Resource Centre (Sept. 19, 2019), https://www.business-humanrights.org/sites/default/files/documents/19092019_Letter_John_Ruggie.pdf.

91 Id.

92 See OHCHR FAQs, supra note 15, at 22.

93 General Comment No. 36, supra note 83, at para. 63 (emphasis added).

94 General Comment No. 36, supra note 83, at para. 22.

95 U.N. Committee on Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights (CESCR), General Comment No. 24, on State Obligations under the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights in the Context of Business Activities, at paras. 30–35, U.N. Doc. E/C.12/GC/24 (Aug. 10, 2017).

96 Id. at para. 30 (emphasis added).

97 Id. at para. 32.

98 Id.

99 Much has been written on due diligence in international law, see, for example the debate on the concept of due diligence in the UNGP: Jonathan Bonnnitcha & Robert McCorquodale, The Concept of ‘Due Diligence’ in the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights, 28 Eur. J. Int’l L. 899, 900–01 (2017); the response in John Gerald Ruggie & John Sherman III, The Concept of ‘Due Diligence’ in the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights: A Reply to Jonathan Bonnitcha and Robert McCorquodale, 28 Eur. J. Int’l L. 921 (2017); Jonathan Bonnitcha & Robert McCorquodale, The Concept of ‘Due Diligence’ in the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights: A Rejoinder to John Gerard Ruggie and John F Sherman, III, 28 Eur. J. Int’l L. 929 (2017). See also Davitti, supra note 61, at 59–68 (2016).

100 U.N. International Law Commission (ILC), Draft Articles on Prevention of Transboundary Harm from Hazardous Activities, A/56/10 (2001). Tillmann Altwicker, Transnationalizing Rights: International Human Rights Law in Cross-Border Contexts, 29 Eur. J. Int’l L. 581, 603 (2018).

101 U.N. International Law Commission, supra note 100, at commentary to art. 1, para. 7.

102 U.N. International Law Commission, supra note 100, at commentary to art. 3, para 4.

103 U.N. International Law Commission, supra note 100, at commentary to art. 5, para. 3.

104 U.N. Committee on the Rights of the Child (CRC), General Comment No. 16, on State Obligations Regarding the Impact of the Business Sector on Children’s Rights, U.N. Doc. CRC/C/GC/16 (Apr. 17, 2013).

105 Id. at para. 44.

106 Id. at para. 45. See also, Sanyu Awori et al., A Feminist Approach to the Binding Instrument on Transnational Corporations and Other Business Enterprises, 3 Bus. & Hum. Rts. J. 285 (2018).

107 See, e.g., Marko Milanovic, Extraterritorial Application of Human Rights Treaties: Law, Principle and Policy (2011) (focusing on chapter 4); Maarten den Heijer & Rick Lawson, Extraterritorial Human Rights and the Concept of ‘Jurisdiction’, in Global Justice, State Duties: The Extraterritorial Scope of Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights in International Law 153–92 (2013). See also Lea Brilmayer & Isaias Yemane Tefalidet, Third State Obligations and the Enforcement of International Law, 44 Int’l L. & Pol. 1, 39–42 (2011).

108 Milanovic, id. See also Samantha Besson, The Extraterritoriality of the European Convention on Human Rights: Why Human Rights Depend on Jurisdiction and What Jurisdiction Amounts To, 25 Leiden J. Int’l L. 857 (2012).

109 General Comment No. 24, supra note 95, at para. 27.

110 See Kamasaee v Commonwealth of Australia & Ors., [2014] 6770 CLR (settling eventually without admission of responsibility on the part of Australia).

111 Sarah Miller, Revisiting Extraterritorial Jurisdiction: A Territorial Justification for Extraterritorial Jurisdiction under the European Convention, 20 Eur. J. Int’l L. 1223, 1238 (2009).

112 See Altwicker, supra note 100, at 590–94 (discussing the need to adopt a functional approach to jurisdiction). He also suggests the adoption of an (effective) “control over situations” test to fully capture instances in which a specific situation has extraterritorial effects on the enjoyment of human rights. In his view, “in this transnationalized version of the jurisdictional test, the focus lies on the control of (harmful) circumstances (for example, large-scale pollution, cross-border surveillance activities targeting individuals).” Id.

113 OHCHR Accountability and Remedy Project I, supra note 19.

114 See, e.g., G.A. Res. 217 (III) A, Universal Declaration of Human Rights art. 8, U.N. Doc. A/RES/217(III) (Dec. 10, 1948); International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights art. 2, Dec. 16, 1966, S. Exec. Rep. 102–23, 999 U.N.T.S. 171; Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women art. 6, U.N. Doc. A/RES/34/180 (Dec. 18, 1979); Convention Against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment art. 14, Dec. 10, 1984, 1465 U.N.T.S. 85; Convention on the Rights of the Child art. 39, Nov. 20, 1989. See also UNGA, Basic Principles on the Right to a Remedy and Reparation for Victims of Gross Violations of Human Rights Law and Serious Violations of Humanitarian Law, Resolution 60/147, A/RES/60/147 (2005), especially principles 18–23; ARSIWA, supra note 75, at art. 34 (Forms of Reparations). For UN Treaty Bodies, see HRC, General Comment No. 31, The Nature of the General Legal Obligation Imposed on States Parties to the Covenant, U.N. Do. CCPR/C/21/Rev.1/Add.13 (2004), para 16; Committee against Torture, General Comment No. 3, Implementation of Article 14 by States parties, U.N. Doc. CAT/C/GC/3 (2012).

115 UNGP, supra note 12. UNGP 12 explains that a company’s responsibility to respect pertains, at a minimum, to all human rights expressed in the International Bill of Rights and the provisions enshrined in the International Labour Organization’s Declaration of Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work.

116 Davitti, supra note 8, at 36–39. See also Julia Himmrich, A ‘Hybrid Threat’? European Militaries and Migration, (Dahrendorf Forum IV, Working Paper No. 02 2018), https://www.dahrendorf-forum.eu/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/Militarising-Migration-Julia-Himmrich.pdf.