2013
DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.2299649
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Do Human Rights Regimes Affect FDI in Developing Countries?

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Cited by 3 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…The respect of human rights can also reduce the risk for FDI, by enhancing political stability and predictability and decreasing the vulnerability of investors to the costs associated with public sensitivity to human rights' repression (Blanton and Blanton, 2007, p. 144). Garriga (2013) includes the issue of foreign investors' reputational concerns to the discussion of human rights violations influence on FDI. Garriga's empirical work in developing non-OECD countries provides evidence supportive of the argument that violations of physical integrity rights in countries characterized by a low commitment to human rights regimes work as a deterrent to FDI.…”
Section: Property-rights Protectionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The respect of human rights can also reduce the risk for FDI, by enhancing political stability and predictability and decreasing the vulnerability of investors to the costs associated with public sensitivity to human rights' repression (Blanton and Blanton, 2007, p. 144). Garriga (2013) includes the issue of foreign investors' reputational concerns to the discussion of human rights violations influence on FDI. Garriga's empirical work in developing non-OECD countries provides evidence supportive of the argument that violations of physical integrity rights in countries characterized by a low commitment to human rights regimes work as a deterrent to FDI.…”
Section: Property-rights Protectionmentioning
confidence: 99%