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"), the culmination of the work of the UN Special Representative on business and human rights, John Ruggie, and his team.
(From Yar: Piracy at the Seventh Circuit, Hard Consonant, July 29, 2011)
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.
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.").
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 Citi, Corporate Citizenship, Ethics and Human Rights)
This posting continues a section by section consideration of the final
version of the Guiding Principles, focusing on the GP provisions elaborating the corporate responsibility to respect human rights.
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 and Development Law Journal, 2011
and can be accessed here.
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 and Development Law Journal, 2011
and can be accessed here.
_________________________________
The Corporate Responsibility to Respect Principles
I have suggested that a substantial amount of principled
pragmatism stands between the “Protect, Respect, and Remedy” framework and the
final version of the Guiding Principles.
The Guiding Principles, as finally endorsed, represents a substantial
aggregation of compromises and choices made to avoid the fate of the Norms in
2005. The Guiding Principles do not
fully implement a broad reading of the “protect, Respect and Remedy” framework,
but does it preserve the essence of that framework? The answer emerges from a consideration of
the movement from draft to final version of the GP; and what emerges is a
qualified yes. The GP preserves the
essence of the “Protect, Respect, and Remedy” framework but at a price—shifting
the center of gravity to the state duty to protect and recasting remedies as a
consequential aspect of the state duty to protect. In the process, both the corporate responsibility
to respect and the remedial pillar become more peripheral aspects. And thus the qualification: what remains
preserves the structure of the “Protect, Respect and Remedy” framework. It leaves an opening, smaller than that
suggested by the framework, but clear enough, from out of which corporations and
other non-state stakeholders might rework the GP to more closely mirror the
framework. This section considers the
provisions of the General Principles in the form endorsed by the UN Human
Rights Council in detail. Subsection A
examines the definitions created under the DP and abandoned in the GP along
with the capstone principles that inform interpretation of the GP as a whole.
Subpart B then considers the GP Principles elaborating the state duty to
protect human rights. Subpart C analyzes
the GP touching on the corporate responsibility to respect human rights and
subpart D considers the GP touching on the remedial obligations of states and
business entities.
C. The Devil is in the Detail—Section By Section Analysis: Corporate
Responsibility to Respect Principles.
1. The Corporate Responsibility to Respect Human
Rights: Foundational Principles. If
the first ten General Principles touching on the state duty to protect are
grounded in the language of regulatory and political primacy and broadly sketched
role in the domestication of collective, the General Principles take on an
altogether different tone in the context of the responsibilities of business
entities. Rather than primacy within
interlocking systems of state, international and private power that mark the GP
for the state duty to protect, the principles here acknowledge a subordinated
regulatory role for the corporation, but one in which the obligations of the
corporation are much more specifically detailed. The General Principles move here from the
language of political discourse and governance, to the social norm discourse of
surveillance, monitoring, disclosure and mediation, and all under the eye of
the state. The state duty is couched in
the language of law and policy. The
corporate responsibility to respect is grounded in the language of due
diligence.
Yet, over the course of several years’ reports, the SRAG
developed the quite innovative insight that corporations also operate
autonomously from states, that such operation is subject to a well developed
governance system rooted in global social norms, and that such behavior norms
are enforceable by the community of actors through which social norms are
expressed. The Corporate responsibility
GPs, however, muffle that insight in the service of states and their legal
orders. Because the responsibility of
corporations does not flow entirely from states, the legal arrangements enacted
by states do not serve to shield corporations from their autonomous
obligations, yet the extent of that obligation is bounded by the law through
which the state duty to protect is itself framed. The corporate responsibility to respect human
rights suggests a potent innovation in governance, yet takes only a few steps
toward an innovative institutionalization within the framework of international
law. The GP retain, importantly, a nod to the significance of an autonomous
basis for human rights enforcement, but are careful to retain the primacy of at
least the formal ties of corporate entities to the state and its remedial mechanics.
The foundational principles were originally organized in two
principles, DP 12-13. These were divided
and broadened into five principles in the final version (GP 11-15). GP 11 articulates the basic standard: “Business
enterprises should respect human rights.”[1]
The standard is then defined: “This means that they should avoid
infringing on the human rights of others and should address adverse human
rights impacts with which they are involved.”[2]
The definition of the “responsibility to respect” standard of GP
Principle 12 is particularly important in a number of respects. First, the standard is constructed in a way
that emphasizes the autonomy of the rule standards for the corporate responsibility,
especially from the law-based system of states.
The corporate responsibility consists of its own normative system, one
that may interact and overlap with the law system of states (and the international
system) but one that remains separate form them as to sources of rules, the
community that makes up the governance regimes subject to this autonomous responsibility,
and the implementation of those governance norms. This is expressed in a number
of ways. First, the Commentary stresses
the autonomy of corporate social norm systems. “It exists independently of
States’ abilities and/or willingness to fulfill their own human rights
obligations, and does not diminish those obligations.”[3] Second, the corporate responsibility grounded
in these social norm principles is not measured by the forms of responses
required under the domestic law of states.[4] Third, the human rights social norm system
which is the object of the GP are only a part of the social norm system
applicable to entities, which the GP is not meant to constrain.[5] Lastly, responsibility carries with it the
corollary that social norms should not undermine law based human rights obligations
of states, though the suggestion, by implication, is that corporations may
undermine domestic governance that is not consonant with a state’s duty to
respect human rights.[6]
GP 12 (DP 12(a) substantially unchanged) provides a
definition of the scope of the responsibility to respect human rights. It is meant to refer to all human rights but
at a minimum to the International Bill of Human Rights and the eight ILO core
conventions.[7] The specificity accorded to the definition of
internationally recognized human rights, applicable to both states and
corporation in the draft version, is now confined to corporations under the
responsibility to respect principles. A justification is possible: states are
bound only to those international human rights to which they have acceded or to
the small group of additional standards that are accorded universal
applicability. Beyond that, states may
have policy reasons for incorporating human rights standards, but no legal
obligations, either applicable internally or enforceable by the community of
nations. The Commentary also suggests
that its definition is merely a minimum default rule;[8]
some circumstances may warrant expansion of the definition,[9]
other circumstances may require corporations to “respect the human rights of
individuals belonging to specific groups or populations that require particular
attention, where they may have adverse human rights impacts on them.” [10]
GP 13 (DP 12(b) and 13, modified in part), further refines
the nature of the responsibility to respect human rights by describing the
relationship between the scope of the responsibility and the way in which
business enterprises ought to behave in relation that that standard. GP
Principle 13 specifies negative and action.
First, the corporation should “avoid causing or contributing to adverse
human rights impacts through their own activities, and address such impacts
when they occur.”[11] Second, the corporation should “seek to
prevent or mitigate adverse human rights impacts that are directly linked to
their operations, products or services by their business relationships, even if
they have not contributed to those impacts.”[12] The Commentary makes clear that the intent of
this principle gathers several concepts together and frames their
relationships. The primary objective is
address the scope of business activities within the scope of the corporate
responsibility to respect human rights.
The Principle suggests a broad scope, covering not merely the direct
actions of the entity, but also the activities that produce adverse human
rights impacts “as a result of their business relationships with other parties.”[13]
This both softens and changes the scope of the language in the
draft, DP 12(b).[14] Rather than focusing on either “supply chain”
or “value chain” concepts,[15]
the final version of Principle 13 focuses on the consequences of activities and
its relationship with the corporation by focusing generally on activities,[16]
and on the construction of a structure for determining mitigation obligations
set forth in GP Principle 19.
GP 14 (DP 12(c), 13, and 15, modified in part) introduces a
principle of proportionality to the calculus of responsibility.[17]
A significant factor in addressing proportionality
is the degree of connection between the entity and the effect. That was the subject of GP Principle 13. GP Principle 14 identifies two other factors. First, proportionality is based partly on
corporate capacity, which, in turn, is based on the usual indicators—size,
management structures, resources and the like.[18] But there are limits, balanced against
capacity are considerations of the severity of the adverse human rights impact
of corporate activity. The “severity”
constraints then bring the calculus back, in part, to the issue of
connection. Yet, GP Principle 14 adds a
layer of understanding to the basic insight of GP Principle 13, embracing the
notion that legal relationships will not affect the determination of either
capacity or severity, applying to “all enterprises regardless of their size,
sector, operational context, ownership and structure.”[19]
The Principle importantly, then, embraces a functionalist
approach, eschewing any effort to adhere strictly to the law or legal
consequences of corporate or enterprise organization at the heart of the
domestic legal orders of states that have chartered these enterprises. The corporate responsibility applies “to all enterprises regardless of their size,
sector, operational context, ownership and structure.”[20]
The state’s duty, of course, is limited by the requirements of
its legal obligations,[21]
though it has an obligation toward legal coherence in light of its legal obligations
with respect to human rights.[22] The provisions are thus in tension unless one
understands that the responsibility to respect operate polycentrically. To the extent of the relationship between
corporation and state, the corporation is bound by and its responsibilities for
human rights limited by the legal framework within which it operates in any
territory.[23] However, to the extent of the responsibility
among corporations and non-state parties in their own governance communities,
then the legal framework of states is no longer a constraint under the framework
principles of GP Principle 11.
The coherence notions explicit in the relationships between a
state and its law obligations are suggested as well by this construct in the
relationships between law systems and social norm systems. There is an element of direct interaction between
international norms and the identification of the social norm rules applicable
to corporations. This suggests an
assumption in the General Principles of an implicit acceptance of international
political consensus, reflected in international norms, accurately reflects the
norm framework for corporate behavior. More importantly, it also assumes that
international norms (whether or not considered “law” within or by states) stand
at the head of a hierarchy of norm creation applicable to corporations. While the community of corporate actors and
their stakeholders may also develop social norms that control or affect their
behavior, the articulation of those norms by public international actors tends
to be presumed the most authoritative expression of those norms. Thus while the normative rule universe of
corporate responsibility is autonomous of state law systems, it is assumed to
interact directly with international actors for the production (or at least the
articulation) of the norms making up the responsibility to respect. And third,
there is an explicit understanding hat the standards applicable to conduct
under legal governance regimes may be different from those under the social
norm regimes of the corporate responsibility.
This is particularly apparent in the context of complicity. Here norm
rule autonomy is emphasized by a recognition that complicity may be triggered
both under the legal standard developing under domestic and international law
regimes and otherwise under notions of corporate social norm frameworks.[24]
GP Principle 15 rounds out the opening set of fundamental
principles that define the corporate responsibility to respect human rights,
moving the focus from the standard itself to its expression. If states
manifest their policies and behavioral expectations through law and regulation,
businesses express theirs through rules, policies and contract. GP Principle 15 addresses the enterprise’s
human rights responsibilities in the elaboration of its governance system: “In
order to meet their responsibility to respect human rights, business
enterprises should have in place policies and processes appropriate to their
size and circumstances.”[25]
GP Principle 15 then specifies three areas of policy that require highlighting,
an articulation of a policy commitment to human rights (presumably both in its
legal and social norm aspects, though that is not clear from the principle
itself),[26]
the self-imposition of a human rights due diligence framework that is
elaborated in some detail in GP Principles 16-24),[27]
and the establishment of remediation processes.[28]
2. The Corporate Responsibility to Respect Human
Rights: Operational Principles, Policy Commitment. The foundational Principles of the
corporate responsibility to respect human rights commits business entities to
the development of a regulatory framework that operationalizes the respect
commitment. GP Principle 16 (DP
Principle 14 substantially unmodified) focuses on the specifics of implementation. It specifies the so-called policy commitments
of corporations, understood as built on the development of a policy statement
with a fixed form and content.[29]
It described the five key elements of a corporate policy the embodies the
responsibility to respect human rights.[30] These include policy approval at the most senior level of the business
enterprise; consultation with relevant internal and external expertise; a clear
expression of the enterprise’s expectations of personnel and business partners;
effective communication of the policy internally and externally to all
personnel, business partners and relevant stakeholders; and incorporation
within appropriate operational policies and procedures to embed it throughout
the business enterprise.[31]
These are not unusual and reflect an emerging set of practices already well
incorporated into the global operation of the largest enterprises.[32]
They are meant to embody, within the
context of the corporate responsibility to protect, the principles of policy
coherence[33]
and disclosure[34]
that also form part of the state duty to protect human rights.
Like legislation, policy pronouncements “should be publicly
available. It should be communicated actively to entities with which the
enterprise has contractual relationships; others directly linked to its
operations, which may include State security forces; investors; and, in the
case of operations with significant human rights risks, to the potentially
affected stakeholders.”[35]
A proportionality principle is also suggested.[36]
Lastly, like states, the policy should
reach from the lowest to the highest levels of operation.[37]
3. The Corporate Responsibility to Respect Human
Rights: Operational Principles, Human Rights Due Diligence. The articulation of the governance
framework provides the structure for the elaboration of the operational heart
of the principles developing the corporate responsibility. It is with GP Principles 17-21 that one
reaches this operational heart.
A corporation’s commitment to human rights grounded in the GP
framework is evidenced by and measured against a set of requirements identified
as human rights due diligence. These
detail the obligations of corporate human rights due diligence as the central
operational feature of the corporate responsibility to respect. Human rights
due diligence has four broad objectives, to “identify, prevent, mitigate and account for how they address their
adverse human rights impacts.”[38]
Human rights due diligence must be directed to four principles functions: “assessing
actual and potential human rights impacts, integrating and acting upon the
findings, tracking responses, and communicating how impacts are addressed.”[39] These objectives of human rights due
diligence may be incorporated in other corporate monitoring and reporting
systems, as long as they do not lose their distinctive character.[40] The diligence aspects should be ongoing and
oriented ex ante. [41]
The extent of human rights due diligence is grounded in the
fundamental scope rules of the corporate responsibility as a whole. These limitations touch on three issues. The first is touches on issues of coverage.[42]
The second focuses on issues of
complexity and context of operations.[43]
The third considers issues of time horizons in human rights due diligence.[44] It is in the context of coverage that the
issue of supply and value chain liability resurfaces, mitigating liability
where the connection between the corporation and the entity directly responsible
are either too remote or where a control or influence relationship is
unreasonable.[45] It also serves to develop a principle of
corporate complicity for the adverse human rights impacts of others—including
states.[46] The Commentary emphasizes the effects of
polycentricity in the context of corporate liability. With respect to complicity, corporations
musty be aware of the distinct bases for complicity liability under legal
regimes[47]
and under social norm regimens.[48]
There is irony here, since the complicity relationship appears to proceed only
in one direction.[49]
Moreover, the retention by states of control over the application of their
legal obligations, including those relating to issues of complicity, can
substantially affect the success of efforts to harmonize approaches, in the
absence of which actors can act strategically to minimize the impact of these
principles on their operations. The connection between legal and social norm
governance produces a tension for the human rights due diligence project that
is recognized but not resolved.[50] This tension is common to supra-national soft
law systems with a polycentric element in the absence of substantial
harmonization between the legal regimes applied in a specific state and the
global social norms applied under soft law regimes that draw on these. This was recently illustrated in the context
of both procedural[51]
and substantive[52]
rules under the OECD Guidelines for Multinational Corporations. [53]
The specific contents of human rights due diligence are then
elaborated in GP Principles 18-21. These
are meant to provide more concrete guidance to enterprises that wish to
undertake human rights due diligence within the GP framework. GP Principle 18 (DG 16 substantively
unmodified in significant respect) specifies the outputs of human rights due
diligence. It elaborates issues of identification
and assessment in human rights due diligence programs.[54]
Following the guidance of GP Principle 17, GP Principle 18 specifies that assessment
be undertaken in advance of action that might have a negative impact on human
rights, should identify those potentially affected and the issues the proposed
action raises, should identify the relevant substantive standards that might be
applied, and undertake to understand the specific nature of the adverse human
rights impact.[55] The GP explains that such systems should utilize
internal or external human rights
experts and other resources, and seek to engage meaningfully with potentially affected
groups and other relevant stakeholders, the later with an explicit proportionality
principle .[56] Assessment is required periodically and when
there is a material change in operations,[57] a
standard similar to those triggering disclosure under the U.S. federal securities
laws.[58] The stakeholder engagement provision is
broadly written to permit the use of civil society actors as legitimate
intermediaries where direct engagement is not possible. But the GP leave
unresolved the issue of third party representative legitimacy or liability by
civil society for misrepresenting either their authority to represent or their
fidelity to the interests of those they represent.[59]
“The assessment of
human rights impacts informs subsequent steps in the human rights due diligence
process.”[60]
GP Principle 19-21 then moves the process forward. GP Principle 19 (DP Principle 17) shifts attention
from outputs to action, identifying the two things a corporation must undertake
in the face of an adverse human rights impact of its activities.[61] It must
first assess the impact of the action,[62] and it
must then take appropriate action on the basis of the assessment.[63] The
object is to prevent and mitigate potential adverse human rights effects of corporate
activity by creating a structure by which assessments can be given effect.[64] The
Principle makes a distinction between impacts to which the company (or its
supply chain) have directly contributed and those where the connection is more
indirect. Remediation (or prevention) is
required for the former,[65] but a
more nuanced approach is permitted in the latter case.[66] The Commentary suggests that the corporation
ought ot rely on outsiders where the factors to be balanced in its risk, impact
and action assessments are complex.[67] A hierarchy of responsive action in the face
of assessment suggesting adverse human rights impacts of corporate activity
proposed or undertaken.[68]
GP Principle 20 (DP
Principle 18 modified in part) adds a verification requirement.[69] The specified method of verification is
tracking, which is required to exhibit two characteristics. First, it ought to be “based on appropriate
qualitative and quantitative indicators.”[70] Second
it should draw “on feedback from both internal and external sources, including affected
stakeholders.”[71] The Principle dropped an additional
requirement that appeared in the draft principles—that it “inform and support
continuous improvement processes.”[72] The Principles understand verification as
serving an important surveillance function—tracking and analysis.[73] There is an expectation that data will be
harvested from all phases of the human rights due diligence process and all contacts
with affected stakeholders.[74] The Commentary urges integration into relevant
reporting processes with a cross-reference to the corporation’s remediation
obligations.[75]
The surveillance
obligations of human rights due diligence elaborated in CP Principle 20 lead to
the disclosure and transparency requirements set forth in GP Principle 21
(modifying DG Principle 19). This
provision focuses on accountability through communication.[76] That communication is initially directed
toward external informal and episodic communication, when triggered by
stakeholder concerns, but is also understood to include a formal reporting component
for business enterprises “whose operations or operating contexts pose risks of
severe human rights impacts.”[77]
The final version
dropped an earlier suggestion that reporting should be regular,[78] substituting
a more flexible context based requirement.[79] The frequency and form of disclose is a
function of the severity of the human rights impacts.[80] The object is not general transparency, but
merely a “a measure of transparency and accountability to individuals or groups
who may be impacted and to other relevant stakeholders, including investors.”[81]
4. The Corporate Responsibility to Respect Human
Rights: Operational Principles, Remediation. The single principle that
comprises this section considers the situation where assessment, and ex ante
action is insufficient. GP Principle 21
(DP Principle 20 substantially unmodified) provides: “Where business
enterprises identify that they have caused or contributed to adverse impacts,
they should provide for or cooperate in their remediation through legitimate processes.”[82]
This Principle articulates
a simple liability standard for failures to respect human rights. The obligation to remediate is tied to the
principal human rights due diligence obligation, though not limited by it. [83] In the draft version of this provision, the
liability standard was not grounded in the law of any state. Nor was it dependent on the operation of a
particular domestic legal order either to determine liability or to calculate
the measure of damages. As a functional
part of the autonomous responsibility to respect, these obligations flow
directly from the autonomous imposition of responsibility of the second pillar.
Yet the processes of remediation are substantially meant to be tethered to the
state apparatus, at least when injury is substantial.[84] The reason was simple and directed stated—a
fear that in the absence of “vouching” by the organs of the state the processes
for remediation would be illegitimate.[85]
In the final version,
there appears to be less aggressively autonomous. The final version standard described in the
Commentary, “active engagement,” might be understood as something less than the
“help ensure” standard in the draft Commentary.
The reference to resort to operational level grievances remains the
same.[86] Yet “[w]here
adverse impacts have occurred that the business enterprise has not caused or
contributed to, but which are directly linked to its operations, products or
services by a business relationship, the responsibility to respect human rights
does not require that the enterprise itself provide for remediation, though it
may take a role in doing so.”[87] This values or supply chain remediation amelioration provision would have
been hard to reconcile with the Draft Principles emphasis on supply chain
responsibility. But having moved supply
and value chain responsibility into the operational provisions, and having
strengthened and broadened the application of the proportionality rules, it is
now more likely that a larger set of human rights impacts may not be subject to
a remediation requirement in the ultimate parent corporation.
5. The Corporate Responsibility to Respect Human
Rights: Operational Principles, Issues of Context. The last two principles
that make up the corporate responsibility to respect human rights target issues
of context. GP Principle 23 (modifying
DP 23) speaks to the legal obligations of the corporation within a polycentric
context in which the governance norms applicable to it may not harmonize. It
first recognizes the primacy of the state and domestic law over international
law where a corporation is faced with conflicting issues of compliance.[88] It then suggests that, having honored the
primacy of domestic law, corporations have a responsibility to honor even if
not comply with internationally recognized human rights.[89] And lastly, treat all risk of gross human
rights abuses, whether arising from legal or social norm standards as a legal issue throughout its operations.[90]
The Commentary
emphasizes several points. First, all
business enterprises have the same responsibility to respect human rights,
though its application will vary widely in context. All businesses have a first duty to comply
with domestic law that is applicable.
That leaves open and unresolved the equally compelling obligation to
comply with the extraterritorially applicable laws of home state
regulators. The Commentary is silent on
conflicts between the two. In the case of conflict between domestic and
international law, business enterprises must comply with domestic law and find
a way to honor the principles international law, especially “the principles of
internationally recognized human rights to the greatest extent possible in the
circumstances, and to be able to demonstrate their efforts in this regard.”[91] The Commentary supports the provision that business Enterprises treat
human rights impacts as a legal issue “given
the expanding web of potential corporate legal liability arising from
extraterritorial civil claims, and from the incorporation of the provisions of
the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court in jurisdictions that
provide for corporate criminal responsibility.”[92] Yet
this also complicates the simple hierarchy posed between domestic and
international law set out in GP Principle 23(a), suggesting situations where
compliance with domestic law might constitute a violation of international law
that is subordinated to domestic law in the territory where it is enforced but
where that hierarchy is reversed elsewhere.
In this case polycentricity presents a potential trap. Special
considerations apply in conflict zones—where the corporation may be called on
to exercise augmented obligations and thus face potentially augmented liability
regimes.[93]
Finally, the utility of reliance on experts, emphasized in other corporate
responsibility principles, is extended to issues of legal compliance.[94]
In draft form, this
principle spoke to issues of operationalization standards for the human rights due diligence framework
grounded in two action vectors—first the size of the enterprise and second the
severity of human rights impacts.[95] These identify baseline rules for the implementation
of context specific action principles.
The baseline includes four factors.
The first touches on the heightened obligation to substitute for the
host state with respect to the observation of internationally recognized human
rights in weak states.[96] This parallels the state duty to project
government into weak states or conflict zones.[97] The second obligates companies to “honor”
human rights principles “where domestic legal compliance may undermine their
responsibility to respect.” [98] The third reminds entities that the
responsibility applies in conflict zones.[99] And
the fourth suggests that issues of human rights compliance are transformed into
more conventional issues of legal compliance (under international law or the
law of the relevant domestic legal order) where the conduct risks or causes or
contributes to international crimes.[100]
Finally, GP Principle
24 (DP Principle 22) provides basic rules of prioritization. Where priority is necessary, the “business
enterprises should first seek to prevent and mitigate those that are most
severe or where delayed response would make them irremediable.”[101] The context for prioritization is
simultaneity,[102]
but it applies only where specific legal guidance is unavailable, or better
perhaps, unavailing.[103] And
context is privileged; the severity of human rights is not measured against
absolute values.[104]
[1] GP
Principle 11.
[2] Id.
[3] GP Principle 11 Commentary. “And it exists over and above compliance with
national laws and regulations protecting human rights.” Id.
[4]
“Addressing adverse human rights impacts requires taking adequate measures for
their prevention, mitigation and, where appropriate, remediation.” GP Principle
11 Commentary.
[5]
“Business enterprises may undertake other commitments or activities to support
and promote human rights, which may contribute to the enjoyment of rights. But
this does not offset a failure to respect human rights throughout their
operations.” GP Principle 11 Commentary.
[6]
“Business enterprises should not undermine States’ abilities to meet their own
human rights obligations, including by actions that might weaken the integrity
of judicial processes.” GP Principle 11 Commentary.
[7]
GFP Principle 12. The Commentary
elaborates:
An authoritative list of the core internationally recognized
human rights is contained in the International Bill of Human Rights (consisting
of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the main instruments through
which it has been codified: the International Covenant on Civil and Political
Rights and the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights),
coupled with the principles concerning fundamental rights in the eight ILO core
conventions as set out in the Declaration on Fundamental Principles and Rights
at Work.
Id.
[8]
“Because business enterprises can have an impact on virtually the entire spectrum
of internationally recognized human rights, their responsibility to respect applies
to all such rights.” GP Principle 12 Commentary.
[9]
“In practice, some human rights may be at greater risk than others in
particular industries or contexts, and therefore will be the focus of
heightened attention. However, situations may change, so all human rights
should be the subject of periodic review.” Id.
Thsi is particularly true when corporations opérate in conflicto zones
and may acquire some of the obligations of a public carácter. “Moreover, in situations of armed conflict
enterprises should respect the standards of international humanitarian law.”
Id.
[10]
Id. “In this connection, United Nations
instruments have elaborated further on the rights of indigenous peoples; women;
national or ethnic, religious and linguistic minorities; children; persons with
disabilities; and migrant workers and their families.”
[11] GP
Principle 13(a).
[12] GP
Principle 13(b).
[13] GP
Principle 13 Commentary.
[14]
DP 12 (b) provided that business responsibility to respect human rights: “applies
across a business enterprise’s activities and through its relationships with
third parties associated with those activities. ” DP Principle 12(b). The Commentary suggested the scope of the
obligation was as broad as the corporate value chain. Id. Commentary.
[15] These
ideas, however, do make their appearance elsewhere in the Commentart. See, e.g., GP Principle 17, discussed
infra. The relationship between these concepts
is difficult to discern.
[16]
“For the purpose of these Guiding Principles a business enterprise’s
“activities” are understood to include both actions and omissions; and its
“business relationships” are understood to include relationships with business
partners, entities in its value chain, and any other non-State or State entity
directly linked to its business operations, products or services.” GP Principle
13 Commentary.
[17] “The
means through which a business enterprise meets its responsibility to respect
human rights will be proportional to, among other factors, its size.” GPO
Principle 14 Commentary.
[18] “Small
and medium-sized enterprises may have less capacity as well as more informal
processes and management structures than larger companies, so their respective
policies and processes will take on different forms.” GP Principle 14
Commentary.
[19] GP
Principle 14. These notions were originally in DP Principle 15 but moved here.
[20] GP
Perinciple 14.
[21] CP
Principle 1.
[22] GP
Principle 3(b).
[23] E.g.
GP Principle 2.
[24]
GP Principle 17 Commentary. It explains:
“Questions of complicity may arise when a business enterprise contributes to,
or is seen as contributing to, adverse human rights impacts caused by other
parties. Complicity has both non-legal and legal meanings. As a non-legal
matter, business enterprises may be perceived as being “complicit” in the acts
of another party where, for example, they are seen to benefit from an abuse
committed by that party.” Id.
[25] GP
Principle 15.
[26] “A
policy commitment to meet their responsibility to respect human rights.” GP
Principle 15(a).
[27] “A
human rights due-diligence process to identify, prevent, mitigate and account
for how they address their impacts on human rights.” GP Principle 15(b). The Commentary makes this clear: “Business
enterprises need to know and show that they respect human rights. They cannot
do so unless they have certain policies and processes in place. Principles 16
to 24 elaborate further on these.” GP Principle 15 Commentary.
[28]
“Processes to enable the remediation of any adverse human rights impacts they
cause or to which they contribute.” GP Principle 15(c).
[29] “As the basis for embedding their
responsibility to respect human rights, business enterprises should express
their commitment through a statement of policy” GP Principle 16.
[30]
GP Principle 16(a)-(e).
[31] Id.
[32]
For a discussion in the context of the operations of WalMart, see, Larry Catá
Backer, Economic Globalization and the
Rise of Efficient Systems of Global Private Law Making: Wal-Mart as Global Legislator, 39(4) University
Of Connecticut Law Review 1739
(2007).
[33] “Just as States should work towards policy coherence,
so business enterprises need to strive for coherence between their
responsibility to respect human rights and policies and procedures that govern
their wider business activities and relationships.” GP Principle 16 Commentary.
[34] “The term ‘statement’ is used generically, to
describe whatever means an enterprise employs to set out publicly its
responsibilities, commitments, and expectations.” GP Principle 16
Commentary.
[35]
GP Principle 16 Commentary.
[36]
“The level of expertise required to ensure that the policy statement is
adequately informed will vary according to the complexity of the business
enterprise’s operations.” GP Principle 16 Commentary.
[37]
This imports from the “Protect, Respect and Remedy” Framework the notion of
embedding. “Through these and any other
appropriate means, the policy statement should be embedded from the top of the
business enterprise through all its functions, which otherwise may act without
awareness or regard for human rights.” GP Principle 16 Commentary.
[38]
GP Principle 17.
[39] GP
Principle 17.
[40]
“Human rights due diligence can be included within broader enterprise
risk-management systems, provided that it goes beyond simply identifying and
managing material risks to the company itself, to include risks to
rights-holders.” GP Princ iple 17 Commentary.
[41]
Thus, the Commentary suggests that “should be initiated as early as possible in
the development of a new activity or relationship, given that human rights
risks can be increased or mitigated already at the stage of structuring
contracts or other agreements, and may be inherited through mergers or
acquisitions.” Id.
[42]
Human Rights due diligence “Should cover adverse human rights impacts that the
business enterprise may cause or contribute to through its own activities, or
which may be directly linked to its operations, products or services by its
business relationships.” GP Principle 17(a).
[43]
Human rights due diligence “Will vary in complexity with the size of the business
enterprise, the risk of severe human rights impacts, and the nature and context
of its operations.” GP Principle 17(b).
[44] “Should
be ongoing, recognizing that the human rights risks may change over time as the
business enterprise’s operations and operating context evolve.” GP Principle
17(c).
[45]
“Where business enterprises have large numbers of entities in their value
chains it may be unreasonably difficult to conduct due diligence for adverse
human rights impacts across them all.” GP Principle 17 Commentary. In those
cases, corporations are advised to dfocus on issues with greatest human rights
impacts effects: “business enterprises
should identify general areas where the risk of adverse human rights impacts is
most significant, whether due to certain suppliers’ or clients’ operating
context, the particular operations, products or services involved, or other
relevant considerations, and prioritize these for human rights due diligence.”
Id.
[46] “Questions
of complicity may arise when a business enterprise contributes to, or is seen
as contributing to, adverse human rights impacts caused by other parties.” GP
Principle 17 Commentary.
[47] “As
a legal matter, most national jurisdictions prohibit complicity in the commission
of a crime, and a number allow for criminal liability of business enterprises
in such cases. Typically, civil actions can also be based on an enterprise's alleged
contribution to a harm, although these may not be framed in human rights terms.”
GP Principle 17. The Commentary suggest
a movement toward a consensus on “aider and abettor” standards for civil
liability. Id.
[48] “As
a non-legal matter, business enterprises may be perceived as being “complicit”
in the acts of another party where, for example, they are seen to benefit from
an abuse committed by that party.” GP
Principle 17 Commentary.
[49]
See discussion above at GP Principle --.
[50]
The Commentary explains
Conducting appropriate human rights due diligence should help
business enterprises address the risk of legal claims against them by showing
that they took every reasonable step to avoid involvement with an alleged human
rights abuse. However, business enterprises conducting such due diligence
should not assume that, by itself, this will automatically and fully absolve
them from liability for causing or contributing to human rights abuses.
GP
Principle 17 Commentary.
[51]
See, Larry Catá Backer, Part I: The
OECD, Vedanta, and the Supreme Court of India—Polycentricity in Transnational
Governance--The Issue of Standing, Law at the End of the Day, Nov. 1, 2009
available http://lcbackerblog.blogspot.com/2009/11/part-i-oecd-vedanta-and-supreme-court.html.
[52]
See, Larry Catá Backer, Part II: The OECD, Vedanta, & the Indian Supreme
Court—Polycentricity, Transnational Corporate Governance and John Ruggie’s
Protect/Respect Framework, Law at the
End of the Day, Nov. 3, 2009. Available http://lcbackerblog.blogspot.com/2009/11/part-ii-oecd-vedanta-indian-supreme.html.
[53] OECD,
Guidelines for Multinaitonal Entyerprises (updated 2011), available http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/43/29/48004323.pdf.
[54] “In
order to gauge human rights risks, business enterprises should identify and
assess any actual or potential adverse human rights impacts with which they may
be involved either through their own activities or as a result of their
business relationships.” GP
Principle 18.
[55] GP
Principle 18 Commentary. “In this process, business enterprises should pay
special attention to any particular human rights impacts on individuals from
groups or populations that may be at heightened risk of vulnerability or
marginalization, and bear in mind the different risks that may be faced by
women and men.” Id.
[56] GP
Principle 18(a) and (b).
[57]
The Commentary explains
Because human rights
situations are dynamic, assessments of human rights impacts should be
undertaken at regular intervals: prior to a new activity or relationship; prior
to major decisions or changes in the operation (e.g. market entry, product
launch, policy change, or wider changes to the business); in response to or
anticipation of changes in the operating environment (e.g. rising social
tensions); and periodically throughout the life of an activity or relationship.
GP Principle 18 Commentary.
[58]
The differences are less formally drawn than but follow the same rationale as
periodic reporting under the 1934 Act under which corporations report annually
(Form 10K) and quarterly (Form 10Q) as well as a "current report"
that is used to report the occurrence of any material events or corporate
changes which are of importance to investors or security holders and previously
have not been reported by the registrant. It provides more current information
on certain specified events than would Forms 10-Q or 10-K.
[59]
“In situations where such consultation is not possible, business enterprises
should consider reasonable alternatives such as consulting credible,
independent expert resources, including human rights defenders and others from
civil society.” GP Principle 18 Commentary.
[60]
GP Principle 18 Commentary.
[61]
“In order to prevent and mitigate adverse human rights impacts, business enterprises
should integrate the findings from their impact assessments across relevant
internal functions and processes, and take appropriate action.” GP Principle
19.
[62]
GP Principle 19(a).
[63]
GP Principle 19(b).
[64] “The
horizontal integration across the business enterprise of specific findings from
assessing human rights impacts can only be effective if its human rights policy
commitment has been embedded into all relevant business functions. This is required
to ensure that the assessment findings are properly understood, given due
weight, and acted upon.” GP Principle 19 Commentary.
[65] “Where
a business enterprise contributes or may contribute to an adverse human rights
impact, it should take the necessary steps to cease or prevent its contribution
and use its leverage to mitigate any remaining impact to the greatest extent
possible.” GP Principle 19
Commentary.
[66]
The Commentary suggests a more complex calculus, grounded in a factor balancing
analysis. “Among the factors that will enter into the determination of the appropriate
action in such situations are the enterprise’s leverage over the entity
concerned, how crucial the relationship is to the enterprise, the severity of
the abuse, and whether terminating the relationship with the entity itself
would have adverse human rights consequences.” GP Principle 19 Commentary. The standard does not require legal precision
precisely because no legal standard is invoked.
Thus concepts of “leverage” play onto the calculus here in ways that
might not have been appropriate either under the first pillar state duty to
protect or even with respect to the extent of the corporate responsibility
beyond the corporation itself. GP Principle 19 Commentary (“Leverage is
considered to exist where the enterprise has the ability to effect change in
the wrongful practices of an entity that causes a harm.”).
[67] “Leverage
is considered to exist where the enterprise has the ability to effect change in
the wrongful practices of an entity that causes a harm.” GP Principle 19
Commentary.
[68]
The Commentary speaks of these as involving the use of leverage—in an effort to
contrast, perhaps, the law based discourse of ameliorative measured imposed on,
by and through states. It is a curious
framework all the same. Irrespective of
its value as a framing device, the hierarchy consists of prevention first, then
mitigation (which might be augmented by obligations to capacity building among
stakeholders), followed by terminating the relationship or activity causing the
adverse human rights impact, “taking into account credible assessments of
potential adverse human rights impacts of doing so.” GP Principle 19
Commentary. Relationships crucial to the
enterprise are subject to a different set of factor balancing. See id.
[69] “In order to verify whether adverse human
rights impacts are being addressed, business enterprises should track the
effectiveness of their response.” GP Principle 20.
[70] GP
Principle 20(a).
[71] GP
Principle 20(b).
[72] DP
Principle 18(c).
[73] “Tracking
is necessary in order for a business enterprise to know if its human rights
policies are being implemented optimally, whether it has responded effectively
to the identified human rights impacts, and to drive continuous improvement.”
GP Principle 20 Commentary. The tracking element is particularly important with
respect to groups most likely to suffer adverse human rights impacts form
corporate activity. “Business
enterprises should make particular efforts to track the effectiveness of their
responses to impacts on individuals from groups or populations that may be at
heightened risk of vulnerability or marginalization.” Id.
[74] “Business enterprises might employ tools they
already use to track their performance on other issues, including performance
contracts, reviews, surveys and audits. Operational-level grievance mechanisms
can also provide important feedback on the business enterprise’s human rights
performance from those directly affected.” GP Principle 20 Commentary.
[75]
“This could include performance contracts and reviews as well as surveys and
audits, using gender- disaggregated data where relevant. Operational-level grievance
mechanisms can also provide important feedback on the effectiveness of the
business enterprise’s human rights due diligence from those directly affected
(see Principle 29).” GP Principle 20 Commentary. This suggestion, of course, must be read
together with the earlier caution in the GP about subsuming human rights due
diligence within the risk management protocols of a business entity. See, e.g.,
GP Principle 17 Commentary.
[76]
“Communication can take a variety of forms, including in-person meetings,
online dialogues, consultation with affected stakeholders, and formal public reports.
Formal reporting is itself evolving, from traditional annual reports and corporate
responsibility/sustainability reports, to include on-line updates and integrated
financial and non-financial reports.” GP Principle 21 Commentary.
[77]
GP Principle 21.
[78]
“Periodic public reporting is expected of those business enterprises whose activities
pose significant risks to human rights.”
DP Principle 19 Commentary.
[79]
Reporting should “Be of a form and frequency that reflect an enterprise’s human
rights impacts and that are accessible to its intended audiences.” GP Principle 21(a).
[80] “Formal
reporting by enterprises is expected where risks of severe human rights impacts
exist, whether this is due to the nature of the business operations or operating
contexts.” GP Principle 21
Commentary.
[81] GP
Principle 21 Commentary.
[82] GP
Principle 22. “Some situations, in particular where crimes are alleged, typically
will require cooperation with judicial mechanisms.” GP Principle 22 Commentary.
[83] “Where a business enterprise identifies such
a situation, whether through its human rights due diligence process or other
means, its responsibility to respect human rights requires active engagement in
remediation, by itself or in cooperation with other actors.” GP
Principle 22 Commentary.
[84] “Business enterprises should have
procedures in place to respond to such situations directly, where appropriate,
and where possible should address problems before they escalate” DP
Principle 20 Commentary.
[85]
That vouching is effected through the third pillar principles covering the remedial
right to be treated below. “Operational-level
grievance mechanisms for those potentially impacted by the business
enterprise’s activities can be an effective means of providing for such
procedures when they meet certain core criteria, as set out in Principle 29.” DP Principle 20 Commentary.
[86]
“Operational-level grievance mechanisms for those potentially impacted by the
business enterprise’s activities can be one effective means of enabling
remediation when they meet certain core criteria, as set out in Principle 31.”
GP Principle 22 Commentary.
[87]
Id.
[88] Business
entities should “Comply with all applicable laws and respect internationally
recognized human rights, wherever they operate;” GP Principle 23(a).
[89]
The language is curious; business enterprises should see “ways to honour the principles of
internationally recognized human rights when faced with conflicting
requirements. Principle 23(b).”
[90] Biusiness
enterprises should “Treat the risk of causing or contributing to gross human
rights abuses as a legal compliance issue wherever they operate.” GP Principle 23(c).
[91] GP
Prtinciples 23 Commentary.
[92] Id. “In
addition, corporate directors, officers and employees may be subject to
individual liability for acts that amount to gross human rights abuses.”
Id.
[93]
“Some operating environments, such as conflict-affected areas, may increase the
risks of enterprises being complicit in gross human rights abuses committed by
other actors (security forces, for example).” GP Principle 23 Commentary.
[94]
“In assessing how best to respond, they will often be well advised to draw on
not only expertise and cross-functional consultation within the enterprise, but
also to consult externally with credible, independent experts, including from
governments, civil society, national human rights institutions and relevant
multi-stakeholder initiatives.” GP Principle 23 Commentary.
[95]
DP Principle 21 speaks to “the scale and complexity of policies and processes
for ensuring that business enterprises respect human rights will vary according
to the enterprises’ size and the severity of their human rights impacts.”
[96] DP
Principle 21(a) (“Observe
internationally recognized human rights also where national law is weak, absent
or not enforced”).
[97] See
GP Principle 10 and discussion, supra,
at text and notes ---.
[98]
DP Principle 21(b). The Commentary notes: “Where legal compliance with domestic law puts the business enterprise
in the position of potentially being involved in gross abuses such as
international crimes, it should consider whether or how it can continue to
operate with integrity in such circumstances.” DP Principle 21
Commentary.
[99]
DP Principle 21( c). The Commentary hreminds entities of their potential exposure
to action under international criminal law in such situations where they are
not careful.
Some operating
environments, such as conflict affected areas, may increase the risks of
enterprises contributing to, or being complicit in, international crimes
committed by other actors (for example, war crimes by security forces).
Prudence suggests that companies should treat this risk as a legal compliance
issue, given the expanding web of potential corporate legal liability arising
from extraterritorial civil claims, and in the criminal sphere from the
incorporation of the provisions of the Rome Statute of the International
Criminal Court in jurisdictions that provide for corporate criminal
responsibility.
DP Principle 21 Commentary.
[100] DP
Principle 21(d). The Commentary suggests
consultation with experts, and defines them broadly to include civil society
actors. DP Principle 21 Commentary.
[101]
GP Principle 24.
[102] “While
business enterprises should address all their adverse human rights impacts, it
may not always be possible to address them simultaneously.” GP Principle 24
Commentary.
[103] “In the absence of specific legal guidance,
if prioritization is necessary, business enterprises should begin with those human rights impacts that would be most
severe, recognizing that a delayed response may affect remediability.” GP Principle 22 Commentary. The Draft version included included impacts “where
the risk of irremediable impact is high.” DP Principle 22 Commentary.
[104]
“Severity is not an absolute concept
in this context, but is relative to the other human rights impacts the business
enterprise has identified.”
GP Principle 24 Commentary.
2 comments:
Very informative post...My juristaff and I really want to share this to our friends and relatives...Cheer up and good work.
As always, Larry's posts are timely, interesting and fun to read.
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