Abstract

Before the 1900s, the busted economic balance blurred the eyes of the governments in developing commonwealths, which took heed of pursuing finical impartiality instead of addressing environmental complications. Admitting a considerable number of MNEs into their land without strict examination of their environmental-friendly credibility, the nature scenes of these countries are irreversibly damaged. The turning point arrived in 1984 when the deleterious chemicals of the subsidiary of Union Carbide in India seeped. However, all these rampant pollution activities have only slightly abated, not eradicated. This essay will examine the current situation and how to deactivate the illegal contamination in the host countries using the analysis of legal norms and case studies to proffer reference to various political, legal, and commercial interested herd. The cardinal mentioned solutions include promoting nature-related education through social media and compulsory education system, establishing monitor departments to monitor the track of exotic companies, and so on. Putting the environmental problems in the spotlight, countries with a copious budget and human resources started to manage their natural situation. MNEs from the sophisticated areas which are required strictly by their government to reduce the pollution on their land, naturally turn to the emergent countries, where they may not expect the heavy cost of the environmental damage. This essay will analyze how MNEs spread pollution in the host states, and how the host states should take actions to prevent their ecosystem from obtaining harm.

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