The OECD Convention on Bribery
A Commentary
Mark Pieth editor Peter J Cullen editor Lucinda A Low editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:1st Mar '07
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
The OECD Treaty of 1997 introduced criminal liability for OECD-based individuals and companies who bribe foreign officials to win business.
The OECD Convention is the first major international treaty specifically to address 'supply-side bribery' by sanctioning the briber. This book is an article-by-article commentary which gives particular attention to the results of the OECD monitoring process as applied to state implementation.The OECD Convention is the first major international treaty specifically to address 'supply-side bribery' by sanctioning the briber. The OECD Convention establishes an international standard for compliance with anti-corruption rules by 36 countries, including the 30 OECD members and six non-member countries, with the leading OECD exporting countries receiving particular attention. This book is an article-by-article commentary which gives particular attention to the results of the OECD monitoring process as applied to state implementation. Companies in particular are at ever greater risk of legal and 'reputational' damage resulting from failure to comply with the anti-corruption standards set inter alia, by the OECD Convention. This book provides them with comprehensive guidance on the OECD standards. The commentary also constitutes a significant work of comparative criminal law. It is written and edited by persons who include experts involved in development of the Convention standards as well as academics and legal practitioners.
ISBN: 9780521868174
Dimensions: 235mm x 163mm x 45mm
Weight: 1187g
652 pages