BUSINESS AND HUMAN RIGHTS / Šturma, Mozetic (eds)
In this way, the governance of human rights in transnational spaces, conditioned by the pressures of global society or touched by the pressures of global capitalism, gain with the SDGs an agenda to constitute and formulate policies in any scope, be they macro- structural, environmental or social. The new global era entails changes in which the Earth as a system will impose its geological domain, considering a scale from the present to the future generations. Still, the times ahead consolidate a world population of 9 billion people (by 2050), with a “world society” with egalitarian vulnerabilities in a society that will need to create wealth in a context of technological life and innovation. 33 5. Conclusion International business is one of those phenomena with a strong tendency to progress – that is, more businesses – but it is a fact that for them to be sustainable there will be a need for a critical arrangement. Its development, considering a transnational space, must occur in the guarantee of Human Rights. This dependence on international affairs for the guarantee of Human Rights achieves in the 2030 agenda a strategic platform so that it can then be accomplished. It is assumed that international business must be developed in a transnational space so that the International Community can deal with issues as urgent to the human being as peace between nations, global consumer protection, international trade, the environment for current and future generations, internationally organized crime and other brand-new issues related to new technologies such as biotechnology evolution of medicine and world cyberspace. Human Rights are also necessary demands for international affairs, when we see that issues such as peace, the environment, consumption, protection of children and adolescents, the elderly, etc., are weaker than the economic interests of large corporations and central states. When the economic interests of the most powerful are at stake, we know that the will of those always prevails. As the vulnerable subject of the absolute state, as the unprotected worker in the liberal state of law of the nineteenth century, the present citizen needs to see their demands strengthened, with Agenda 2030 being a strategic platform for such demands. Moreover, the evident crisis of democracy, the lack of effectiveness of the juridical phenomenon in the global scope and the lack of vigor of the national state to deal with common human beings, leads us to think of new possibilities to regulate and renew citizenship issues. The European Union is certainly the example of transnationalization that has overcome the purely economic issue and with respect to the decision of majorities and a sublime invocation, consideration and respect for fundamental rights has changed the direction of future transnational alliances. its Fundamentals. Sequence: Juridical and Political Studies . Florianópolis, v. 36, n. 71, p. 239, ten. 2015. Available at: https://periodicos.ufsc.br/index.php/sequencia/article/view/2177-7055.2015v36n71p239d. 33 MESSNER, D. Three waves of global change – The dynamics of global governance in the first half of the 21st century, Thomas Fues/LIU Youfa (eds.). Global governance and building a harmonious world: a comparison of European and Chinese concepts for international affairs . Bonn: Deutsches Institut für Entwicklungspolitik/German Development Institute, Studies 62, p. 9-38.
36
Made with FlippingBook Online newsletter