Building on the success of 2016's "EMEA Corporate Liability Handbook," we are pleased to present you with the first Global Corporate Liability Handbook that collates and describes in detail the corporate liability and corporate crime regimes of countries in Asia, EMEA and the Americas. With increased enforcement, international regulatory cooperation, economic activity on a global scale, and countries such as China and France passing their own laws, we felt that a global overview of the laws that affect corporations and their employees was both timely and required.

Corporate liability can be established and sanctioned at various levels — criminal, quasi-criminal (administrative) and civil — and be associated or derive from the liability of individuals who have acted in the name or on behalf of the company. Likewise, corporate liability can be established as an independent law violation or even as a crime, regardless of the commission of a separate crime by the individual.

In addition, corporate liability is a growing threat to the reputation, profit and business image of global corporations. The adoption of adequate measures to prevent corporate liability has progressively become a legal and ethical duty, similar to corporate social responsibility, which corporations are expected to assume for the benefit of their stakeholders, customers and employees.

In our Handbook, you will find detailed descriptions of the nature of liability in various jurisdictions, the consequences of breach by a company of the relevant legal provisions, and the remedies and measures that a company can adopt to limit or even exclude such liability. We have also addressed corporate liability in multinational groups and the basis for the extension of the liability to the ultimate parent company.

Follow this link to explore our brand new handbook.

The content of this article is intended to provide a general guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought about your specific circumstances.