Abstract
This chapter examines how the corporate law principles of legal personality and limited liability shape tort liability in global value chains. Focusing on multinational lead firms, it shows how parent companies use equity-based control to coordinate subsidiaries and consolidate returns while externalizing environmental and human rights harms. We analyse how asset partitioning and the rarity of veil piercing create strategic incentives and moral hazard, and assess five legal strategies to reallocate liability: tort-based veil piercing, enterprise liability, unlimited and control-based shareholder liability, and liability for conduct of others. We argue that control-based liability for lead firms offers a particularly promising way to internalize GVC-related harms.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Title of host publication | Cambridge handbook of law and responsible business |
| Subtitle of host publication | Legal strategies for sustainability in global value chains |
| Editors | Anne Lafarre, Paul Verbruggen, Ricardo Garcia Anton, Bas Rombouts, Debadatta Bose |
| Publisher | Cambridge University Press |
| Publication status | Accepted/In press - 1 Jun 2026 |