Restitution: Difference between revisions
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''Law.'' | |||
The legal principle that where a person has benefited undeservedly at another's expense, that person may be required to restore any improper benefit obtained. | The legal principle that where a person has benefited undeservedly at another's expense, that person may be required to restore any improper benefit obtained. | ||
:<span style="color:#4B0082">'''''ESG litigants not seeking financial restitution'''''</span> | |||
:"The main risks to issuers from the rising incidence of ESG-related litigation are not financial but strategic and operational, as many ESG lawsuits seek structural changes in business practice rather than financial restitution." | |||
:''The Treasurer online - 6 May 2022.'' | |||
== See also == | == See also == | ||
* [[Environmental, social and governance]] (ESG) | |||
* [[Issuer]] | |||
* [[Law]] | |||
* [[Litigation]] | |||
* [[Rescission]] | * [[Rescission]] | ||
[[Category:Compliance_and_audit]] | [[Category:Compliance_and_audit]] |
Latest revision as of 21:43, 3 August 2024
Law.
The legal principle that where a person has benefited undeservedly at another's expense, that person may be required to restore any improper benefit obtained.
- ESG litigants not seeking financial restitution
- "The main risks to issuers from the rising incidence of ESG-related litigation are not financial but strategic and operational, as many ESG lawsuits seek structural changes in business practice rather than financial restitution."
- The Treasurer online - 6 May 2022.