Abstract
Global value chains (GVCs) channel commodities, knowledge and capital, but also regulation. By placing obligations on lead firms to be complied with across the value chain, rule-setters can regulate transnational production entities, GVCs, by proxy. In doing so, they overcome the territorial limits of their regulatory capacity. Regulators make extensive use of this possibility in the latest generation of transnational sustainability laws adopted in the Global North. In this chapter, we chart the extension of governance through GVCs, detail how such governance is increasingly the focus of explicit regulatory activity, and discuss what this means for the political economy of transnational production. In particular, we undertake a functional comparison of the justifications for and mechanisms deployed in European Union (EU) regulations adopting an explicit value chain perspective, such as the EU Conflict Minerals Regulation, and propose a novel typology for conceptualising the transnational extension of EU law and the internal market along GVCs.
Original language | English |
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Title of host publication | The Foundations of European Transnational Private Law |
Editors | Anna Beckers, Hans-W Micklitz, Rodrigo Vallejo, Pia Letto-Vanamo |
Number of pages | 32 |
Place of Publication | Oxford |
Publisher | Hart Publishing |
Publication date | May 2024 |
Pages | 367-398 |
Chapter | 14 |
ISBN (Print) | 9781509962921 |
ISBN (Electronic) | 9781509962938 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - May 2024 |
Keywords
- Global value chains
- Transnational regulation
- Private governance
- Brussels effect
- Global political economy