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We hope this book will make a difference. There are many books on human rights: histories, philosophy, legal studies, sociological and anthropological studies. Ethnographies are myriad, and human rights are mentioned in a remarkable range of studies of contemporary politics in the complex discipline called political science. Economists, global health scholars, and public policy scholars of almost every focus make contributions. But still, it is difficult to get a topic such as corporate social responsibility into focus, to find the perspective, comprehensive and practical, necessary to reach informed judgments.
There is something curiously problematic about what scholars tend to contribute to human rights theory and practice. By and large they do what they do well. Many studies considered individually, including stellar monographs by contributors here, make major contributions in their own terms—their own disciplinary terms. As Charlotte Walker-Said might put it—in fact as she does, in the introduction here, when talking specifically about legal studies of corporate social responsibility—scholarship is all too often “siloed.” I want to say something complicated about this simple situation.
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