Insight & Roundtables Soft law, hard sanctions – Human rights laws and the next risk front facing business Legal Business · 2 September 2016 · 19 min read In-house Legal affairs Herbert Smith Freehills Kramer With human rights issues entering the mainstream of business practice, we teamed up with Herbert Smith Freehills to assess how new standards are changing the way in-house counsel operateYour limit of 1 article in 30 days is up. Please login for full access or subscribe. Corporate users - click here for simple access (no password needed). For more information, please contact [email protected] Related ContentMore in this category‘The merger is working’ – HSF Kramer on its US corporate pushLaw firmsWill Lewallen27 Mar 2026Trading Places: Ropes hires Freshfields levfin co-head as top Kirkland litigator retiresLaw firmsEliza Winter25 Mar 2026HSF Kramer picks up three-partner corporate team from Paul Hastings in New YorkLaw firmsWill Lewallen24 Mar 2026Transport for London plans journey with new roster of legal advisersLaw firmsTom Cox15 Aug 2024The Client Profile: Gurdeep Boparai, Coventry Building SocietyIn-HouseElisha Juttla2 Aug 2024The state of UK general counsel in 2024: Key insights and challengesLaw firmsGuest Blog1 Jul 2024Comment: Depressing end to Weinstein gagging order narrative means closure for noneLaw firmsNathalie Tidman19 Jan 2021Lawyers rank top for satisfaction, value for money, but access to justice gaps persistLaw firmsThomas Alan27 Jan 2020Offshore: The unsilent majorityInternationalDominic Carman29 Oct 2019