Editor’s
note: Shamistha Selvaratnam is a LLM Candidate of the Advanced Masters of
European and International Human Rights Law at Leiden University in the Netherlands.
Prior to commencing the LLM, she worked as a business and human rights
solicitor in Australia where she specialised in promoting business respect for
human rights through engagement with policy, law and practice.
The consumer
goods industry is shaped by businesses’ desire to engage with the best-quality
suppliers at the cheapest price in order to sell goods at a high-profit margin
in the burgeoning consumer markets. Accordingly, they continue to build their
value chains in order to provide goods to consumers. The resulting effect of
this is that potential human rights risks and impacts are likely to arise in
the supply chains of businesses that operate in the industry. Risks that often
arise in this sector include forced labour, non-compliance with minimum wage
laws and excessive work hours, land grabbing and discrimination. Accordingly,
businesses such as Unilever face the challenge of preventing, mitigating and
addressing adverse human rights impacts in their supply chains through
conducting human rights due diligence (HRDD). As Paul Polman (former CEO of
Unilever) has stated:
‘We cannot choose between [economic]
growth and sustainability—we must have both.’
This fourth blog of a series of articles
dedicated to HRDD is a case study looking at how HRDD has materialised in
practice within Unilever’s operations and supply chains. It will be followed by
another case study examining another that has also taken steps to
operationalise the concept of HRDD. To wrap up the series, a final piece will
reflect on the effectiveness of the turn to HRDD to strengthen respect of human
rights by businesses.More...
Editor’s
note: Shamistha Selvaratnam is a LLM Candidate of the Advanced Masters of
European and International Human Rights Law at Leiden University in the
Netherlands. Prior to commencing the LLM, she worked as a business and human
rights solicitor in Australia where she specialised in promoting business
respect for human rights through engagement with policy, law and practice.
The tragic collapse of Rana Plaza in Bangladesh
in 2013, which killed over one thousand workers and injured more than two
thousand, brought global attention to the potential human rights risks and
impacts that are inherent to the garment and footwear sector.[1] This sector
employs millions of workers within its supply chain in order to enable
large-scale production of goods as quickly as possible at the lowest cost as
market trends and consumer preferences change.[2]
These workers are often present in countries where the respect for human rights
and labour rights is weak. This creates an environment that is conducive to
human rights abuses. Key risks in this sector include child labour, sexual
harassment and gender-based violence, forced labour, non-compliance with
minimum wage laws and excessive work hours.[3]
Accordingly, brands such as Adidas face the challenge of conducting effective human
rights due diligence (HRDD), particularly in their supply chains.
This third blog of a series of articles
dedicated to HRDD is a case study looking at how HRDD has materialised in
practice within Adidas’ supply chains.
It will be followed by another case study examining the steps taken by Unilever
in order to operationalise the concept of HRDD. To wrap up the series, a final piece
will reflect on the effectiveness of the turn to HRDD to strengthen respect of
human rights by businesses. More...
Editor’s
note: Shamistha Selvaratnam is a LLM Candidate of the Advanced Masters of
European and International Human Rights Law at Leiden University in the
Netherlands. Prior to commencing the LLM, she worked as a business and human
rights solicitor in Australia where she specialised in promoting business
respect for human rights through engagement with policy, law and practice.
The UNGPs second pillar, the corporate
respect for human rights, is built around the concept of human rights due
diligence (HRDD). Since 2011, following the resounding endorsement of the UNGPs
by the Human Rights Council, it has become clear that HRDD constitutes a
complex ecology of diverse practices tailored to the specific context of a
particular business. The UNGPs are not legally binding and there is no
institutional mechanism in place to control how they are to be translated into
practice by the companies that purport to endorse them. Nonetheless, numerous
companies and regulatory schemes have embraced the idea of HRDD (such as the
OECD Guidelines, the French law on the devoir
de vigilance, the UK and Australian modern slavery laws and the Dutch
Agreement on Sustainable Garment and Textile).
The operationalisation of HRDD has been
shaped over the past 8.5 years by a variety of actors, including international
organisations, consultancies and audit firms, as well as non-governmental
organisations. These actors have conducted research and developed various
methodologies, instruments and tools to define what HRDD is and what it entails
in order to assist or influence businesses in its operationalisation. The
interpretation of the requirements imposed by HRDD process outlined in the
UNGPs is open to a variety of potentially contradictory interpretations. This
pluralism is well illustrated by the diversity of actors involved in an ongoing
struggle to define its scope and implications.
This second blog of a series of articles
dedicated to HRDD looks at it through the lens of the most influential players shaping
HRDD in practice by examining their various perspectives and contributions to
the concept. Case studies will then be undertaken to look at how HRDD has materialised
in practice in specific companies. To wrap up the series, a final piece will
reflect on the effectiveness of the turn to HRDD to strengthen respect for
human rights by businesses. More...
Editor’s
note: Shamistha Selvaratnam is a LLM Candidate of the Advanced Masters of
European and International Human Rights Law at Leiden University in the
Netherlands and a contributor to the Doing
Business Right project of the Asser Institute. Prior to commencing the LLM, she worked as a business and human
rights solicitor in Australia where she specialised in promoting business
respect for human rights through engagement with policy, law and practice.
Human right due diligence (HRDD) is a key
concept of Pillar 2 of the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights
(UNGPs), the corporate responsibility to respect human rights. Principle 15 of
the UNGPs, one of the foundational principles of Pillar 2, states that in order
to meet the responsibility to respect human rights, businesses should have in
place a HRDD process to ‘identify, prevent, mitigate and account for how they
address their impacts on human rights’. However, how was the concept of HRDD
developed? What does it mean? What are its key elements?
This first blog of a series of articles
dedicated to HRDD answers these questions by providing an overview of the
concept of HRDD and its main elements (as set out in the UNGPs) as well as how
the concept was developed. It will be followed by a general article looking at
HRDD through the lens of a variety of actors including international
organisations, non-state actors and consultancy organisations. Case studies
will then be undertaken to look at how HRDD has materialised in practice. To
wrap up the series, a final piece will reflect on the effectiveness of the turn
to HRDD to strengthen respect of human rights by businesses. More...
Editor’s
note: Shamistha Selvaratnam is a LLM Candidate of the Advanced Masters of
European and International Human Rights Law at Leiden University in the
Netherlands. Prior to commencing the LLM, she worked as a business and human
rights solicitor in Australia where she specialised in promoting business
respect for human rights through engagement with policy, law and practice.
Introduction
This report compiles all relevant news,
events and materials on Doing Business Right based on the coverage provided on
our twitter feed @DoinBizRight and on various websites. You are invited to
contribute to this compilation via the comments section below, feel free to add
links to important cases, documents and articles we may have overlooked.
The
Headlines
German
Development Ministry drafts mandatory human rights due diligence
It was reported
on 10 February 2019 that the German Federal Ministry of Economic Cooperation
and Development has drafted legislation (unpublished) on mandatory human rights
due diligence for German companies. It is reported that the law will apply to
companies with over 250 employees and more than €40 million in annual sales.
The draft legislation targets, inter alia, the agriculture, energy, mining,
textile, leather and electronics production sectors. Companies that fall within
the scope of the legislation will be required to undertake internal risk
assessments to identify where human rights risks lie in their supply chains.
Companies would also be required to have a Compliance Officer to ensure
compliance with due diligence requirements. The Labor Inspectorate, the Federal
Institute for Occupational Safety and Health and the Human Rights Commissioner
of the Federal Government would be responsible for enforcing the legislation,
with penalties for non-compliance of up to €5 million (as well as imprisonment
and exclusion from public procurement in Germany).
Kiobel
case heard in the Netherlands
On 12 February 2019, the Dutch courts heard
a lawsuit involving Esther Kiobel and three other women against Shell. The
plaintiffs allege that Shell was complicity in the 1995 killings of their
husbands by Nigeria’s military. The husbands were Ogoni activists that were
part of the mass protests against oil pollution in Nigeria’s Ogoniland. The
judgment is expected to be handed down in May 2019. Read more here. More...
Editor’s note: Shamistha Selvaratnam is a LLM
Candidate of the Advanced Masters of European and International Human Rights
Law at Leiden University in the Netherlands and a contributor to the Doing Business Right project of the Asser Institute. Prior to commencing the LLM, she
worked as a business and human rights solicitor in Australia where she
specialised in promoting business respect for human rights through engagement
with policy, law and practice.
Soon after the
introduction of the UK Modern Slavery Act
(UK Act) in 2015, discussions about establishing similar legislation in
Australia commenced. In February 2017, the Attorney-General asked the Joint
Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs, Defence and Trade (Committee) to
commence an inquiry into establishing a Modern Slavery Act in Australia. The terms of reference of the inquiry included, inter alia, considering the
‘prevalence of modern slavery in the domestic and global supply chains of
companies, businesses and organisations operating in Australia’ and whether a
Modern Slavery Act comparable to the UK Act should be introduced in Australia. The
Committee released an interim report in August 2017 and then a final report in December 2017 – both reports supported the idea
of developing a Modern Slavery Act in Australia and set out the Committee’s
recommendations with respect to the parameters of a corporate reporting
requirement. In the meantime, the Australian Government also published a consultation paper and regulation impact statement outlining its proposed reporting
requirement for an Australian Modern Slavery Act.
In June this
year, the first draft of the Modern
Slavery Bill 2018 (Cth) (the Federal Bill) was introduced into the
Australian Parliament. It set out a reporting requirement for large Australian entities
to submit a statement on risks of modern slavery in their operations and supply
chains. The Explanatory Memorandum to the Federal Bill stated that it
supports ‘large businesses to identify and address modern slavery risks and to
develop and maintain responsible and transparent supply chains. It will drive a
‘race to the top’ as reporting entities compete for market funding and investor
and consumer support.’ On 29 November 2018 the Federal Bill passed both houses of the Australian Parliament incorporating
amendments made by the Upper House of Parliament. The amendments resulted in the inclusion
of a provision giving the Minister power to request explanations from entities
that fail to comply with the reporting requirement (discussed in further detail
below) and gives the Minister the power to cause an annual report to be
prepared providing an overview of compliance by entities and identifying best
practice modern slavery reporting.
This second blog
of a series of articles dedicated to the global modern slavery developments
provides an overview of the main elements of the Federal Bill and how it
compares to the UK Act. It also discusses the Modern
Slavery Act 2018 (NSW) (NSW Act), which was introduced by New
South Wales (NSW), a State in Australia. The introduction of NSW Act was relatively
unexpected given the movement at the Federal level to introduce national
legislation addressing modern slavery in the corporate context. Therefore, this
blog will discuss the NSW Act’s interplay with the Federal Bill. It will be
followed by a final piece on the modern slavery developments in other
jurisdictions in the corporate context. More...
Editor’s
note: Shamistha Selvaratnam is a LLM Candidate of the Advanced Masters of
European and International Human Rights Law at Leiden University in the
Netherlands and an intern with the Doing Business Right project at the Asser Institute. Prior to commencing the LLM, she worked as a business and human
rights solicitor in Australia where she specialised in promoting business
respect for human rights through engagement with policy, law and practice.
Introduction
This report compiles all relevant news,
events and materials on Doing Business Right based on the coverage provided on
our twitter feed @DoinBizRight and on various websites. You are invited to
contribute to this compilation via the comments section below, feel free to add
links to important cases, documents and articles we may have overlooked. More...
Editor’s
note: Shamistha Selvaratnam is a LLM Candidate of the Advanced Masters of
European and International Human Rights Law at Leiden University in the
Netherlands. Prior to commencing the LLM, she worked as a business and human
rights solicitor in Australia where she specialised in promoting business
respect for human rights through engagement with policy, law and practice.
Since the release of the first draft of the
BHR Treaty (from herein referred to as the ‘treaty’), a range of views have
been exchanged by commentators in the field in relation to the content of the
treaty (a number of them are available on a dedicated page
of the Business and Human Rights Resource Centre’s website). While many have
stated that the treaty is a step in the right direction to imposing liability
on businesses for human rights violations, there are a number of critiques of
the first draft, which commentators hope will be rectified in the next version.
This second blog of a series of articles
dedicated to the proposed BHR Treaty provides a review of the key critiques of
the treaty. It will be followed by a final blog outlining some recommendations
for the working group’s upcoming negotiations between 15 to 19 October 2018 in
Geneva. More...
Editor’s note: Shamistha Selvaratnam is a
LLM Candidate of the Advanced Masters of European and International Human
Rights Law at Leiden University in the Netherlands. Prior to commencing the
LLM, she worked as a business and human rights solicitor in Australia where she
specialised in promoting
business respect for human rights through engagement with policy, law and
practice.
By resolution,
on 26 June 2014 the UN Human Rights Council adopted Ecuador’s proposal to
establish an inter-governmental working group mandated ‘to elaborate an
international legally binding instrument to regulate, in international human
rights law, the activities of transnational corporations and other business
enterprises’. The proposal was adopted by 20 to 14 votes, with 13 abstentions,
and four years later, in July this year, the working group published the first
draft of the treaty (from herein referred to as the ‘treaty’). Shortly after, the draft
Optional Protocol to the draft treaty was released. The Optional Protocol
focuses on access to remedy for victims of human rights abuses by businesses.
This first blog of a series of articles
dedicated to the proposed BHR Treaty provides an overview of the main elements
of the draft. It will be followed by a review of the reactions to the Draft,
and a final piece outlining some recommendations for the upcoming negotiations. More...
Introduction
This report compiles all relevant news,
events and materials on Doing Business Right based on the coverage provided on
our twitter feed @DoinBizRight and on various websites. You are invited to contribute
to this compilation via the comments section below, feel free to add links to
important cases, documents and articles we might have overlooked.
Highlights
OECD
Due Diligence Guidance released
On 31 May, the OECD published “OECD
Due Diligence Guidance for Responsible Business Conduct”. Issued after a
multi-stakeholder process with OECD and non-OECD countries and representatives
from business, trade unions and civil society, the guidance provides practical
knowledge to businesses on due diligence recommendations and related provisions
of the Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises. The guidance also aims at
aligning different approaches of governments and stakeholders to due diligence
for responsible business conduct by promoting a common understanding.More...