On March 24, 2011 the United Nations released the "Guiding Principles for the Implementation of the UN Protect, Respect and Remedy Framework" (the "GP" or "Guiding Principles"), by UN Special Representative on business &; human rights, John Ruggie. The Guiding Principles were endorsed by the U.N. Human Rights Council in June, 2011. “In an unprecedented step, the United Nations Human Rights Council has endorsed a new set of Guiding Principles for Business and Human Rights designed to provide -for the first time- a global standard for preventing and addressing the risk of adverse impacts on human rights linked to business activity.” United Nations Human Rights Council, News Release, New Guiding Principles on Business and human rights endorsed by the UN Human Rights Council, 16 June 2011.
(From CIDSE, May 2011).
The consideration of the Guiding Principles marks a great milestone in the development of frameworks of governance of economic actors outside of the framework of national law. This milestone can be understood as consisting of four great aspects. The Guiding Principles represents the first successful efforts to provide a governance framework that can be adopted into the national legal orders of adhering states. In this aspect it represents a critical effort in the harmonization of national law on the basis of global consensus. At the same time, the Guiding Principles also represents the first successful effort to provide a framework for the development of customary and conventional international law. In this aspect, the Guiding principles represent a critical effort in the harmonization of governance for an important transnational actor at the international level. Additionally, the Guiding Principles for the first time acknowledges the existence and importance of non-governmental sources of governance rules. The embrace of the importance of social norm systems of autonomous behavior rules for economic enterprises represents a critical acknowledgment of non-state actors as a source of norm making the authority of which is not dependent on states. Lastly, the Guidelines for the first time link remedial obligations to the state duty to remedy and the corporate responsibility to respect human rights in a way that both preserves the autonomy of human rights and their connection to both law and social norms systems.
The Guiding Principles will likely be significantly influential not just as a source of soft law principles at the international level, but as a basis for the evolution of common understanding of appropriate standards of corporate behavior for the development of social norms and eventually changes to the form of the domestic legal orders of states. It will be inevitable that as the Guidelines move toward approval and implementation after endorsement, all major stakeholders in the process will seek to mold the Guidelines to suit their interests. See, e.g., Stefan Marculewicz, U.N. Special Representative's Final Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights: Policy Implications for Employers, Global Employment Law, March 29, 2011 ("We also believe these Guiding Principles, if not addressed proactively by companies, may create an opportunity for advocacy organizations (such as issue-specific non-governmental organizations and labor unions) to seek to define the parameters of the Guiding Principles on their own terms. "). These discussions will draw on the Guiding Principles themselves and their inevitable comparison with failed earlier efforts to provide a structure for the governance of business actions with human rights impacts. John Knox, The Human Rights Council Endorses “Guiding Principles” for Corporations ASIL Insights Aug. 1, 2011 ("In the wake of the debate over the Draft Norms, the appointment of John Ruggie was something of a gamble that he could bring consensus out of the controversy over the application of human rights principles to corporations. To a remarkable degree, he did so. The Human Rights Council’s endorsement of the Guiding Principles opens a new chapter in the continuing effort to bring human rights law to bear on corporations. It remains to be seen, however, how successful the Guiding Principles will eventually prove at curbing corporate abuses of human rights.").
In order to better understand the Guidelines, it may be useful to examine the context in which the Guiding Principles were developed and the development of the Guiding Principles from draft (in November 2010, the "DP" or "Draft Principles") to final form GP (March 2011) from a more neutral perspective. For this purpose I have provided my own thoughts about that context and development that I will develop in a series of posting, divided along the conceptual lines within which the Guiding Principles were framed.
That analysis is divided into several parts:
Part I: From Conception to Principle—The development of the Protect-Respect-Remedy Framework and the Drafting of the Guiding Principles (April 24, 2011);
Part II. The Draft Guiding Principles: Section by Section Analysis (April 30, 2011);
Part III. Justification and Legitimacy in the Introduction to the Guiding Principles Implementing the UN "Protect, Respect and Remedy" Framework.
Part IV. Section By Section Analysis, From Draft to Final Principles: Overall Structure and Capstone Principles.
Part V. Section By Section Analysis: The State Duty to Protect Principles.
Part VI. Section By Section Analysis: The Corporate Responsibility to Respect.
Part VII. Section By Section Analysis: The Obligation to Remedy.
Part VIII. The General Principles: A Preliminary Assessment.
(From TwentyFifty)
The Principles Revealed: Justification and Legitimacy in the Introduction to the Guiding Principles Implementing the UN "Protect, Respect and Remedy" Framework.
This posting continues a consideration of the final version of the Guiding Principles, focusing on the framing elements of the GP, its justification and general presumptions.
The full analysis will be published as
Backer, Larry Catá, From Institutional Misalignment to Socially Sustainable Governance: The Guiding Principles for the Implementation of the United Nation’s 'Protect, Respect and Remedy' and the Construction of Inter-Systemic Global Governance (September 5, 2011). Pacific McGeorge Global Business & Development Law Journal, 2011 and can be accessed here.
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The System Unveiled: The Introduction to the Draft and Final Versions of the Guiding Principles
The Guiding Principles were
unrevealed in two stages, separated by about half a year. The draft version of the Guiding Principles
(“DG”) was circulated in November 2010. It
was introduced by the final report of the SRSG, summarizing the SRSG’s work
from 2005 to 2011, and presenting Guiding Principles for consideration by the
Human Rights Council. The SRSG circulated the final version of the Guiding
Principles (“GP”) in March 2011. The Guiding Principles represent a new
approach to the framing of governance for multinational corporations within a
complex system that, though grounded in the rules of the domestic legal orders
of states, seeks to go beyond that to international and private governance regimes.
True to the SRSG’s intention to construct a framework grounded in principled
pragmatism,[1]
the Guiding Principles appear to be developed to strike balances among the
multiple competing ideologies, governance approaches and stakeholders that have
made the process from Norms, to “Protect, Respect and Remedy” framework, and
ultimately to the Guiding Principles so complex. That balance, posits a framework of
inter-systemic harmonization[2]
of a governance regime to which three autonomous but deeply related systems
contribute—the law-state system, the international system and the social-norm
system. That framework of inter-systemic
harmonization is then itself implemented through an integrated but functionally
divided system of dispute resolution that both reflects the autonomy of the
governance systems that make up the regime, and the need for harmonization and
connection of method. As such, it
ground breaking for reasons much greater than its utility in clarifying the
private sector’s responsibility for human rights.[3] The complexity of the movement to DG requires
a close reading not merely of the Guiding Principles themselves, but also of
the introductory statements through which the SRSG thought to set the stage for
the understanding of and to provide an interpretive basis for the principles
that follow. A close analysis of these introductory statements, as both theory
and praxis, reveals both the nature and complexity of the breakthrough that the
Guidelines represent and set the stage for the detailed analysis of the Guiding
Principles themselves that following Section IV.
A. The 2011 Report: The Maturation of Principled Pragmatism.
The Draft Guiding Principles
are introduced by a short Report (the “2011 Report”)[4]
that is meant to set the stage for the principles and commentary that
follow. It represents the distillation
of the SRSG’s project, the evolution of which was chronicled in detail in the
Reports from 2006 through 2010.[5] It also suggests the theoretical-policy
foundations of the principles that follow, and its implementation. This section examines that Report and
suggests the way in which it provides an important window on the DG, their
character and limitations.
The focus of the Report is
business—not a particular form that business can take, corporation,
partnership, conglomerate, joint venture, value or supply chain, or the
like—but business understood as a complex nexus of economics, law and politics.[6] That nexus is posited as having been at some
sort of reasonable equilibrium state in which the roles of the state and of
non-state actors were aligned. But the
last several decades have “witnessed growing institutional misalignments, from
local levels to the global, between the scope and impact of economic forces and
actors, and the capacity of societies to manage their adverse consequences.”[7] At the heart of this misalignment is the
corporation, which has itself evolved to embody “complex
forms that challenge conventional understanding and policy designs.”[8] These changes have affected all regions and
states; they have effectively shattered the old status quo.[9] Change is not merely expedient; change is
necessary to restore the alignment between the economic, policy, political and
social forces represented by business and those represented by the state.
This opening paragraph nicely
sets the stage for the elaboration of both the theory and praxis that is to
follow. Its purpose is specific—to focus on the problem of the governance of
private aggregations of economic power.
The logic of this construct is straightforward. Economic, political and communal spheres
operate best when they exist in a stable system in which each contributes to
the social fabric and each is bound by a set of obligations that ensure the
stability of the system and the likelihood that it will work towards maximizing
the ability of this construct to contribute to the welfare of people and the
stability of the state. But the logic of
globalization[10]
has changed the traditional alignment of these three communities. Though the SRSG focuses on the misalignment
caused by the evolution of corporate power, misalignment also has roots in the
evolution of state and communal power.
For example, regimes of free movements of capital, goods and services
has substantially altered the relationship between states and corporations, but
has also changed the relationship of states with their populations and with
other states as well. The burgeoning
network of agreements among states has substantially altered the relationship between
states and greatly augmented the institutional character and regulatory power
of the community of states through increasingly effective international organizations
both public and private in character.
The decentralization of power has substantially increased the number and
character of stakeholders in global society.[11]
But the SRSG does not mean to set the world
right. His object is more modest in
scope, though not in aim. The sort of “epochal changes”[12]
suggested by the description of changes in the global order is well represented
in microcosm in the transformation of the framework governance regimes for
business sand human rights.[13] The microcosm of business and human rights,
as exemplary of the misalignments in governance regimes, proved irresistible—a
contained space within which new approaches could be developed and implemented,
“to map the challenges and recommend effective means to address them.”[14]
But something as simple in
theory as human rights,[15]
proved more difficult in practice where the aim was to “shift from institutional misalignments onto a socially sustainable path.”[16] The SRSG thus moves from the description of
the problem—misalignment—to the consequences of its resolution, requiring “operational and cultural changes in and among governments
as well as business enterprises—to create more effective combinations of
existing competencies as well as devising new ones.”[17] And thus the SRSG moves from the singular
focus on business, where he started the report, to the implication of that
focus—the need for governments as well as business to change their behavior.
In recognizing the need to
implement socially sustainable governance, the SRSG also acknowledges that the
international community must play a key role.[18]
But business and human rights is acknowledged as new a policy domain as the
international community is at the early stages of the journey to sustainable
governance.[19] Business and human involves all rights that
enterprises can affect,[20]
includes all rights holders,[21]
and can invoke a broader range of regulatory tools than traditional state or
international institutional actors.[22]
International institutional
involvement is necessary because the traditional balance between business and
state actors cannot be broad back into balance without its intervention. Moreover, because multiple regulatory systems
are involved, the scope of the problem of business and human rights is
considerable broader than the problems usually subject to the regulatory
frameworks of the law-state. Globalization
has produced something of a parity of power between companies and some states.[23] The result is that the issue of business and
human rights is bound up with the issue of states and human rights—companies
may be complicit in the law system based human rights violations of states, and
states may be involved in the human rights violations of companies.[24] Two distinct governance areas are thus intimately
connected, yet each is also subject to governance regimes that, though they may
overlap, are not the same.[25] And both law-state and corporate social-norm
systems are intertwined with networks of regulation at the international
level. Moreover, the human rights
obligations of states, corporations and international organizations are bound
up in larger webs of legal and social norm constraints.[26]
For the SRSG, then, the
problem of misalignment is the expression of a macro issue that is supported,
in some measure by the underling structural incapacities of states. “State practices
exhibit substantial legal and policy incoherence and gaps.”[27] Policy incoherence is the outward expression
of institutional incapacity in the face of changing circumstances.[28] At the international level, incoherence is evidenced
by the disordered state of territorial limits of state action. [29] Extraterritoriality is at once valued both
for its ordering effect on behavior across borders, and encouraged as a means
of controlling the activity of business.[30] But it is also reviled as a means of
projecting power from dominating to subordinated states.[31]
The SRSG suggests a very narrow form of extraterritoriality—the power of the
home state to assert regulatory authority over its citizens or the entities it
has chartered.[32] The SRSG avoids the more aggressive versions
of extraterritoriality and suggests as an alternative, and better model, the
substitution of inter-state consensus standards for projections of state power
abroad. And indeed, one can understand
both the need for extraterritoriality as a tool and its solution, as powerful
evidence of the consequences of misalignment and the way it produces incentives
to extend the subordination of smaller states by larger ones in the form of
extraterritoriality. Misalignment is
also the expression of a macro issue that is supported, in some measure by the
underling structural incapacities of companies.[33] Misalignment and incoherence thus involves
not merely adjustments between public and private governance, but also among
states and within the legal ordering of the community of states.
Having identified the scope
and character of the problem, the SRSG theorizes a solution and posits a
suggested approach to implementation.
One major reason that past public and
private approaches have fallen short of the mark has been the lack of an
authoritative focal point around which the expectations and actions of relevant
stakeholders could converge. Therefore, when the Special Representative was
asked to submit recommendations to the Human Rights Council in 2008 he made
only one: that the Council endorse the ‘Protect, Respect and Remedy’ Framework
he had proposed, following three years of extensive research and inclusive
consultations on every continent.[34]
The
Protect-Respect and Remedy Framework is then described.[35] The relationship of the Protect-Respect and
Remedy Framework with the problem of misalignment and the context of multiple
autonomous governance regimes is examined.[36] Its utility is also suggested by the breadth
of its influence,[37]
even before it has been operationalized.[38]
If the Protect, Respect and
Remedy Framework provides the theoretical “authoritative
focal point around which the expectations and actions of relevant stakeholders
could converge”[39]
then the GP provides the operational focal point for the project. “The Guiding
Principles that follow constitute the next step, providing the “concrete and
practical recommendations” for the Framework’s implementation requested by the
Council.”[40] The nature of the CP’s contribution to the
resolution of the problem that gave rise to the SRSG’s project is complex and
subtle. The GP contributes to the “operational and cultural changes in and among governments
as well as business enterprises—to create more effective combinations of
existing competencies as well as devising new ones”[41]
not by changing contemporary legal and social norm structures but by providing
a new organization for them. That
organization is grounded in elaboration of existing practices and standards,
their integration within a single
framework, and the identification of areas that require further development.[42] But at the same time, the operationalization
proposed (in the form of the GP) is not meant to be what the SRSG describes as
a mere “toolkit, simply to be taken off the shelf and plugged in.”[43]
And so the 2011 Report ends
where it started—mindful of the difficulties of theorizing and implementing a
single coherent and comprehensive framework that “will
reflect the fact that we live in a world of 192 United Nations Member States,
80,000 transnational enterprises, ten times as many subsidiaries and countless
millions of national firms, most of which are small and medium-sized
enterprises.”[44] The DP reflects these points of convergence,
autonomy, polycentricity, and flexibility both within the governance frameworks
of each of the components of the system articulated, and within the proposed
framework itself.
In the next section we turn
to an examination of the final version of the Guiding Principles themselves. First considered is the elaboration of the
framework within which the Guiding Principles were meant to be read. The section then turns a section by section
analysis of the GP; critical to this analysis is a consideration of both the GP
themselves, and the changes the occurred from draft to final GP. Lastly, these analytical threads are woven
together to consider the extent to which the GP help “to
secure the development of universally applicable and yet practical Guiding
Principles in order to achieve the more effective prevention of and remedy for
corporate-related human rights harm.”[45]
B. The Principles Unveiled in Final Form: “Introduction to the Guiding Principles.”
While the 2011 Report was
written to serve both descriptive and advocacy objectives, the Introduction to
the final form of the Guiding Principles was The Introduction to the Guiding
Principles,[46]
serves an almost purely framing objective.
Divided into 16 paragraphs, it succinctly summarizes the framework and
framing presumptions of the Guiding Principles.
As such, it provides the most well developed synthesis and exposition of
the business and human rights project begun by the Special Representative in
2005. The first three paragraphs of the
Introduction set the stage, suggesting the historical inevitability of the
Guiding Principles. Paragraph 1 suggests
the inevitability of the project, arising from a fundamental evolution of
global society within which the “issue of business and human rights became
permanently implanted on the global policy agenda in the 1990s, reflecting the
dramatic worldwide expansion of the private sector at the time, coupled with a
corresponding rise in transnational economic activity.”.[47]
Paragraphs 2-3 are particularly important for distinguishing the Guiding
Principles project from more aggressive earlier efforts,[48]
and to confine them to a governance space that would not threaten any of the
principal stakeholders, particularly states.[49] This is important for setting the political
context in which the Guiding Principles are framed—that they do not extend law
or impose additional obligations on states or recognize a new status for
non-state actors. The Special
Representative stresses this point.[50] The Introduction itself is then presented as
the final product of the alternative process initiated on the failure of the
approach represented by the Norms. [51]
The next set of paragraphs
then recount the process from concept to principle. Paragraphs four and five provide a distilled
summary of the first two phase of the process that produced,[52]
and by the method of its production, legitimated, the “Protect, Respect and
Remedy” framework on which the GP are based.[53] Paragraph four is also important for its
suggestion of the necessity of institutionalization of the Guiding Principles
project—the informational (and legitimating) basis of the project is founded on
knowledge of existing standards and practices “that has continued to this day.”[54] The fruits of the second phase of the
Project—“ that the Council support the “Protect, Respect and Remedy” Framework
[the Special Representative] had developed following three years of research
and consultations”[55]—was
described in Paragraph six. Paragraph
six sketches the three pillar framework in broad strokes. It provides a very generalized sense of the
fundamental characteristic of the three pillar framework—grounded in two
distinct but interlinked sources of obligation that are tied by the joint
obligation to remedy breaches of obligation.[56]
Paragraph seven returns to
the issue of legitimization. It describes
the breadth of formal acceptance of the framework by critical stakeholders in
the public, non-governmental, and business sectors. It suggests functional
acceptance by international organizations that have drawn on the “Protect,
Respect and Remedy” framework “in developing their own initiatives in the
business and human rights domain.”[57] Paragraph
eight expands on the legitimation theme by cataloguing the “large number and
inclusive character of stakeholder consultations convened by and for the
mandate [that] no doubt have contributed to its widespread positive reception.”[58] The
object, of course, is to emphasize both substantive legitimacy—grounded in
facts—and process legitimacy, derived from the adherence to generally accepted
methods of stakeholder consultation as a substitute for the conventional
processes of democratic governance in states.[59] Stake holding legitimates action the way mass
popular movements legitimate changes in government sometimes, in their active
and representative capacities, who come “to constitute a global movement of
sorts in support of a successful mandate.”[60]
This legitimating acceptance
led to phase three of the project—operationalizing the three pillar framework, “to
provide concrete and practical recommendations for its implementation.”[61] Those
concrete and practical recommendations were to take the form of guiding
principles.[62] These
Guiding Principles were reinforced by (and reinforced) the approach taken to produce
the “Protect, Respect and Remedy” framework upon which the GP are based.[63] As such, the Guiding Principles are grounded
in the same sort of principled pragmatism that marked the development of the three-pillar
framework, including the “road testing” of particular guidelines,[64]
extensive consultations on the wording of the text,[65] “In short, the Guiding Principles aim not
only to provide guidance that is practical, but also guidance informed by
actual practice.”[66]
And what result? The Special
Representative suggested the principal objective of these efforts—to establish
“a common global platform for action, on which cumulative progress can be
built, step-by-step, without foreclosing any other promising longer-term
developments.”[67] The
Introduction ends with a description of the Guiding Principles defining its
scope and purpose by what the GP are not, focusing on two characteristics in
particular. The first has already been
mentioned—the GP are not a normatively positive project; its object is merely
to integrate, to repackage, the cluster of legal and social norms that already
bind states and corporations (at least as these touch on issues of human
rights, “within a single, logically
coherent and comprehensive template; and identifying where the current regime
falls short and how it should be improved.”[68] Second,
the fact that the GP do not mean to create new legal obligations does not mean
that it is no more tan a more efficient codex; “the Guiding Principles are not
intended as a tool kit, simply to be taken off the shelf and plugged in.”[69] There
is a certain amount of art involved in the application of the GP, precisely
because it involves the interactions of legal and social norms, of states and
corporations, of national and international norms, and of rights and remedies
within and beyond the law of states.[70] Neither normative system nor mere toolbox,
then, the Guiding Principles are offered as a “universally applicable and yet
practical. . . . [doctrines] on the effective prevention of, and remedy for,
business related human rights harm.”[71] Whether,
and to what extent, the GP live up to their billing is the subject considered
next. What emerges, in the form of the
General Principles, are the beginnings of an articulation of the concepts first
developed in the Special Representatives Reports from 2006 through 2011. These beginnings fall far short of the
promise of the framework as conceptualized, but as accepted by the state actors
who populate the U.N. institutional edifice, the GP are a remarkable movement
toward the conceptual framework developed by the Special Representative and
articulated in the “Protect, Respect and Remedy” framework. A section by review of the GP, as it moved
from draft to final version, reveals both the extent of the retreat from the
broadest readings of the “Protect, Respect, and Remedy” framework, and the
extent that the advances of that framework are still preserved in the final
document.
[1]See discussion supra Part II, 2006
Report.
[2] On inter-systemic harmonization,
see, Larry Catá Backer Inter-Systemic
Harmonization and Its Challenges for the Legal-State, in FICHL Publication
Series No. 11 (2011): The Law of the
Future and the Future of the Law 427-437 (Editors: Sam Muller,
Stavros Zouridis, Morly Frishman and Laura Kistemaker; Torkel Opsahl Academic
EPublisher, Oslo, forthcoming 2011).
[3] Norway, Ministry of Foreign Affairs,
Report No. 10 (2008-2009) to the Storting: Corporate Social Responsibility in a
Global Economy, Para. 7.1.1.
[4] Report of the Special Representative
of the Secretary General on the Issue of Human Rights and Transnational
Corporations and other Business Enterprises, John Ruggie, Guiding Principles
for the Implementation of the United Nation’s ‘Protect, Respect and Remedy’
Framework, DRAFT, Nov., 2010.
[5] See discussion infra at ---. For a more detailed examination, see, Larry
Catá Backer, On the Evolution of the United Nations’ 'Protect-Respect-Remedy'
Project: The State, the Corporation and Human Rights in a Global Governance
Context (June 3, 2010). Santa Clara Journal of International Law, Vol. 9, No.1,
2010.
[6] “Business is the major source of
investment and job creation, and markets can be highly efficient means for
allocating scarce resources, capable of generating economic growth, reducing
poverty, and increasing demand for the rule of law, thereby contributing to the
realization of a broad spectrum of human rights. ” 2011 Report at ¶ 1.
[7]
Id.
[8]
Id. The state, of course, also
had evolved in as extraordinary a way, becoming less stridently autonomous and
more enmeshed in a growing web of supra national relationships and
international consensus norms (both embodied in international hard and soft
law) that have challenged the conventional notion of the state, sovereignty,
democratic accountability and law. See,
e.g., R.J. Barry Jones, Globalisation and
Interdependence in the International Political Economy: Rhetoric and Reality (London: Pintor,
1995); Oscar Schachter, The Decline of
the Nation-State and Its Implications for International Law, 36 Colum. J. Transnat’l L. 7 (1998); José
E. Alvarez, Why Nations Behave, 19 Mich. J. Int’l L. 303 (1997-98); Anne
Marie Slaughter, Governing the Global
Economy Through Government Networks, in
The Global Transformations
Reader: An Introduction to the
Globalization Debate 189 (David Held & Anthony McGrew, Oxford:
Polity Press, 2nd ed.,
2000).
[9] 2011 Report at ¶ 1.
[10] On globalization, see, e.g., Manfred B. Steger, Glabalism: The New Market Ideology (New
York: Rowman & Littlefield, 2002);
the classic rendering is Thomas L.
Friedman, The Lexis and the Olive Tree:
Understanding Globalization (Harpswell, ME: Anchor 2000); and the
classic critique is Joseph E. Stiglitz,
Globalization and Its Discontents (New York: W.W. Norton 2003).
[11] “We are beginning to abandon the
hierarchies that worked well in the centralized, industrial era. In their place, we are substituting the
network model of organization and communication, which has its roots in the
natural, egalitarian, and spontaneous
formation of groups among like minded people.” John
Naisbitt, Megatrends 281 (New York:
Warner Books, 1984).
[12] 2011 Report at ¶ 1.
[13] 2011 Report at ¶ 2. The SRSG explains
Institutional
misalignments create the permissive environment within which blameworthy acts
by business enterprises may occur, inadvertently or intentionally, without
adequate sanctioning or reparation. The worst corporate-related human rights
abuses, including acts that amount to international crimes, take place in areas
affected by conflict, or where governments otherwise lack the capacity or will
to govern in the public interest. But companies can impact adversely just about
all internationally recognized human rights, and in virtually all types of
operational contexts.
Id.
[14] 2011 Report at ¶ 2.
[15] “The idea
of human rights is as simple as it is powerful: treating people with dignity.” 2011
Report at ¶ 3.
[16] Id.
[17] Id.
[18] 2011 Report at ¶ 4.
[19] Id.
[20] Id. It is thus distinguished from
traditional human rights agendas at the international organization level, where
organizes its regulatory agendas around a fixed set of particular rights.
[21] Id. It is thus distinguished from
states that can recognize the rights of particular groups.
[22] Id.
It is thus distinguished from regulatory regimes that focus solely on
state-based human rights violations that are restricted to the methodologies of
the law-state; it can invoke the regulatory methods of private actors as well.
[23] 2011 Report at ¶ 5.
[24] The interrelationship has been made
explicit in the ethics based determinations of the Ethics Council of the
Norwegian Sovereign Wealth Fund. See, e.g., Larry Catá Backer, Developing a Coherent Transnational
Jurisprudence of Ethical Investing: The Norwegian Sovereign Wealth Fund Ethics
Council Model Part I
Law at the End of the Day, Feb. 1-28, 2011, available http://lcbackerblog.blogspot.com/2011/02/this-blog-essay-site-devotes-every.html.
[25] The 2011 Report explains:
States are under
competing pressures when it comes to business, not only because of corporate
influence but also because so many other legitimate policy demands come into
play, including the need for investment, jobs, as well as access to markets,
technology and skills. In addition, in the area of business and human rights
States are simultaneously subject to several other bodies of international law,
such as investment law and trade law. . . .
At the same time, business conduct is shaped directly by laws, policies
and sources of influence other than human rights law: for example, corporate
law, securities regulation, forms of public support such as export credit and
investment insurance, pressure from investors, and broader social action.
Id., ¶ 5.
[26] 2011 Report at ¶ 5.
[27] 2011 Report at ¶ 6.
[28] “The most
prevalent cause of legal and policy incoherence is that the units of Governments
that directly shape business practices—in such areas as corporate law and
securities regulation, investment promotion and protection, and commercial
policy—typically operate in isolation from, are uninformed by, and at times
undermine the effectiveness of their Government’s own human rights obligations
and agencies.” 2011 Report at ¶ 6.
[29] 2011 Report, ¶ 7. “This is in
contrast to the approaches adopted in other areas related to business, such as
anti-corruption, money-laundering, some environmental regimes, and child sex
tourism, many of which are today the subject of multilateral agreements.” Id.
[30] “This
enables a “home” State to avoid being associated with possible overseas
corporate abuse. It can also provide much-needed support to “host” States that
may lack the capacity to implement fully effective regulatory regimes on their
own.” 2011 Report at ¶ 8.
[31] For a discussion on
extraterritoriality and neo-colonialism, see, e.g., Kal Raustiala, Does the Constitution Follow the Flag?: The
Evolution of Territoriality in American Law 6 (2009); Richard Falk, Predatory Globalization: A Critique 35-47 (Oxford: Polity
Press, 1999)..
[32] Thus, for example, John Knox suggests “The first
sentence in Paragraph 7 takes a stronger stand against the application of
such obligations to corporate conduct than I think is clearly warranted.
Moreover, it’s a position that is likely to draw fire from critics pointing to
the absence of jurisdictional limits in the International Covenant on
Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, for example, and the ESC Committee’s
strong statements about extraterritoriality.”
Special Representative of the United Nations Secretary-General for
business & human rights, Draft Guiding Principles (GPs) for implementation
of the U.N. "Protect, Respect and Remedy" Framework Online
Consultation(Comments of John Know, Jan. 17, 2011), available http://www.srsgconsultation.org/index.php/main/discussion?discussion_id=19).
[33] “Business consultancies
and corporate law firms are establishing practices to advise clients on the
requirements not only of their legal, but also their social, license to
operate, which may be as significant to an enterprise’s success. However, these
developments have not acquired sufficient scale to reach a tipping point of
truly shifting markets.” 2011 Report at ¶ 9.
[34] 2011 Report, ¶10.
[35] Id., ¶11. See also discussion, supra, at text and notes
-----.
[36] The SRSG explained:
Each pillar is an
essential component in supporting what is intended to be a dynamic system of
preventative and remedial measures: the State duty to protect because it lies
at the very core of the international human rights regime; an independent
corporate responsibility to respect because it is the basic expectation society
has of business in relation to human rights; and access to remedy because even
the most concerted efforts cannot prevent all abuse.
Id.
[37] The Framework has “become a common foundation on which thinking and action by
stakeholders can build over time. Thus, the Framework has already influenced
policy development by Governments and international institutions, business
policies and practices, as well as the analytical and advocacy work of trade
unions and civil society organizations.”
2011 Report, ¶ 12.
[38] “In
resolution 8/7 (June 2008), the Council was unanimous in welcoming this policy
Framework, and in extending the Special Representative’s mandate to 2011 in
order for him to “operationalize” and “promote” it.” Id.
[39] 2011 Report, ¶ 10.
[40] 2011 Report, ¶ 12.
[41] Id.
[42] In the words of the SRSG:
The Guiding Principles’
normative contribution lies not in the creation of new international law
obligations but in elaborating the implications of existing standards and
practices for States and businesses; integrating them within a single, coherent
and comprehensive template; and identifying where the current regime falls
short and how it should be improved.
Id., ¶ 13.
[43] 2011 Report, ¶ 14.
[44] Id.
[45] 2011 Report, ¶ 15.
[46] Introduction ot the Guiding
Principles, in John Ruggie, Report of the Special Representative of the
Secretary General on the Issue of Human Rights and Transnational Corporations
and Other Business Enterprises, John Ruggie, Guiding Principles on Business and
Human Rights: Implementing the United Nations “Protect, Respect, and Remedy”
Framework, Human Rights Council, 17th Session, Agenda Item 3, A/HRC/17/31, 21
March 2011, available http://www.business-humanrights.org/SpecialRepPortal/Home/Protect-Respect-Remedy-Framework/GuidingPrinciples.
[47] Introduction to the Guiding
Principles, supra, note --, at 3 ( ¶ 1).
[48] “One early United Nations-based
initiative was called the Norms on Transnational Corporations and Other
Business Enterprises. . . . Essentially,
this sought to impose on companies, directly under international law, the same
range of human rights duties that States have accepted for themselves under treaties
they have ratified.” Introduction to the
Guiding Principles, supra, note --, at 3 ( ¶ 2).
[49] “This proposal triggered a deeply
divisive debate between the business community and human rights advocacy groups
while evoking little support from Governments.”
Id., at 3 ( ¶ 3).
[50]
“The Guiding Principles’ normative contribution lies not in the creation
of new international law obligations but in elaborating the implications of
existing standards and practices for States and businesses; integrating them within
a single, logically coherent and comprehensive template; and identifying where
the current regime falls short and how it should be improved.” Id., at 5 ( ¶
14).
[51] “This is the final report of the
Special Representative.” Id.
[52] The Special Representative outlined
the three phases of work that led to the framework and the GP. The first was an “identify and clarify” phase
that was meant to distinguish the Special Representative’s project from that
which animated the Norms, and to reframe the project. The second phase is described in Paragraph
5—acceptance of the Human Rights Council’s 2007 invitation to submit
recommendations on the basis of the first phase standards and practices review. Id.,
at 3 ( ¶ 5).
[53] “It has provided a broader and more
solid factual basis for the ongoing business and human rights discourse, and is
reflected in the Guiding Principles annexed to this report.” Id., at 3 ( ¶
4).
[54] Id., at 3 ( ¶ 4). The information universe critical to the
Guiding Principles enterprise includes: “mapping patterns of alleged human
rights abuses by business enterprises; evolving standards of international
human rights law and international criminal law; emerging practices by States
and companies; commentaries of United Nations treaty bodies on State obligations
concerning business-related human rights abuses; the impact of investment
agreements and corporate law and securities regulation on both States’ and
enterprises’ human rights policies; and related subjects.” Id.
[55] Id., at 3 ( ¶ 5). “The Council did so, unanimously “welcoming”
the Framework in its resolution 8/7 and providing, thereby, the authoritative
focal point that had been missing.” Id.
[56] The Special Representative put it
this way:
Each pillar is an essential component in an inter-related
and dynamic system of preventative and remedial measures: the State duty to
protect because it lies at the very core of the international human rights
regime; the corporate responsibility to respect because it is the basic
expectation society has of business in relation to human rights; and access to
remedy because even the most concerted efforts cannot prevent all abuse.”
Id.,
at 3 ( ¶ 5).
[57] Id., at 4 ( ¶ 7).
[58] Id., at 3 ( ¶ 8).
[59] See, e.g., Bradley, Caroline M.,
Consultation and Legitimacy in Transnational Standard-Setting (April 22, 2011).
Minnesota Journal of International Law, Vol. 20, No. 2, 2011; University of
Miami Legal Studies Research Paper No. 2011-23. Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1885045.
[60] Introduction to the Guiding
Principles, supra, note --, at 5 ( ¶
16).
[61] Id.,
at 3 ( ¶ 9).
[62] “During the interactive dialogue at
the Council’s June 2010 session, delegations agreed that the recommendations
should take the form of “Guiding Principles”; these are annexed to this
report.” Id.
[63] “Thus, the Guiding Principles are
informed by extensive discussions with all stakeholder groups, including
Governments, business enterprises and associations, individuals and communities
directly affected by the activities of enterprises in various parts of the
world, civil society, and experts in the many areas of law and policy that the
Guiding Principles touch upon.” Id., at 4 ( ¶ 10).
[64] Id., at 4 ( ¶ 11).
[65] Id., at 5 ( ¶ 12).
[66] Id., at 4 ( ¶ 11).
[67] Id., at 5 ( ¶ 13).
[68] Id., at 5 ( ¶ 14).
[69] Id., at 5 ( ¶ 15).
[70] “While the Principles themselves are
universally applicable, the means by which they are realized will reflect the fact
that we live in a world of 192 United Nations Member States, 80,000
transnational enterprises, 10 times as many subsidiaries and countless millions
of national firms, most of which are small and medium- sized enterprises.” Id.,
at 5 ( ¶ 15).
[71] Id., at 5 ( ¶ 16).
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