(Pix © Larry Catá Backer 2019 (The Coronation of Haile Selassie (Ethiopia 1930) British Museum))
The Coalition for Peace and Ethics BHR Treaty Project is considering Draft of the "Legally
Binding Instrument to Regulate, in International Human Rights Law, The
Activities Corporations and Other Business Enterprises,"
released on 16 July 2019 by the open-ended intergovernmental working
group (OEIGWG) Chairmanship. The CPE Introduction Statement can be
accessed here: The
New Draft of the "Legally Binding Instrument to Regulate, in
International Human Rights Law, The Activities of Corporations and Other
Business Enterprises" And a Call to Submit Comments Before October 2019.
For the informal Index/Table of Contents for the CPE
Treaty Project postings on the Draft Legally Binding Instrument" please follow this link: Index of Posts. We hope that makes
navigating the CPE Treaty Project Commentary easier. The postings will
be listed in reverse chronological order.
This post moves on to Article 6 (Legal Liability)--which is meant to provide a basis for describing the universe of rights that trigger liability, but that may contribute more to confusion than to liability structures. For reasons elaborated below, this is an odd title for an
important section of the Draft Legally Binding Instrument (DLBI). These
include
its
terms, its underlying ambitions, ideologies, and the feasibility of its
gasp, given the constraints within which its authors are necessarily
made to work. This examination of Article 6 was prepared by Larry Catá Backer.
Article 6 of the Draft Legally Binding Instrument--The Conundrums of "Legal" Liability
Larry Catá Backer
Article 6 (Legal Liability), like Article 5 (Prevention)
(discussed here), both appear to have been drafted in the
shadow of the UN Guiding Principles for Business and Human Rights,
and more precisely the UNGP's 2nd Pillar. Article 5 focused on human rights due
diligence; now translated (and perhaps narrowed) into a facility for state
regulated compliance and risk mitigation. Article 6 makes a more pronounced
incision--it moves from Article 5's legalization of the modalities of the UNGP
Second Pillar corporate responsibility, to the dismantling of corporate
responsibility itself as a concept, and in the process brushes away in its
entirety the whole edifice of governmentalization beyond the state.
It is in this sense among the most reactionary of the
provisions of the DLBI; and not just reactionary but from the “progressive” standpoint
that serves as its justification, it is also counterrevolutionary in its
essence. It would effectively sweep aside the core principles of societal
governance through markets that over the last thirty years made it even
possible to grasp the notion of corporate responsibility and to make it a
governable object of regulation. Perhaps despite their best conventional
intentions, the drafters of the DLBI had a brilliant insight that poked its
head out ever so tentatively in Article 1. That insight could be reduced to the
following—all economic activity are expressions of human rights in action; that
is all human activity inevitably touches on human rights (and responsibilities).
Human rights (and inversely the responsibility to observe them) serve as the core principle of governance
and the central purpose of government. It then followed that harms caused to
people (and others) in the context of economic activity ought to be prevented,
and if not prevented, then mitigated (both touching on a
compliance/administrative regulatory function), and if not mitigated, then
remedied (a judicial role).
Yet the drafters then appear to have lost their way. Perhaps
they were trapped by their history or politics. The body of the Treaty is springing
of that trap. It walls create the barriers that effectively reduce this
transformative idea in the body of the text by the constraints of the
transnational, by its limitation to economic actors, by its insistence on human
rights listings and by its conflation of administrative-compliance and
judicial-remedial functions in ways that neither reflect the realities of
government nor those of public or private governance. So in the place of
self-reflective compliance in Article 5, one is treated to an abbreviated version
of human rights due diligence detached from its normative sources and developed
in a way that creates incentives toward regulatory incoherence across
territories. And in place of the societal sphere through which it is possible
to develop regimes of self-reflexive governmentalized economic commercial
institutions (whether owned by private or public persons) Article 6 offers
little more than the false hope of a set of promises to legalize specific
principles and objectives articulated in international instruments in an
instrument that by its fundamental nature itself invites both a rejection of
the premise or a waiver of its specific mandates.
But in the process of legalizing in Article 6, what is
defined in Article 1 as “human rights violations and abuses” it reduces its
scope through a listing exercise that shifts
the emphasis of protection from “harms” to “rules.” Consider that Article 1 §2
defines human rights violation or abuse as a (1) harm (2) committed by a state
or business enterprise (3) through acts or omissions (4) in the context of
business activities (5) against any person or group of persons (6) which harm
could be measured in specified ways to include injury emotional suffering
economic loss or substantial impairment of human rights. Article 6 then (with
some redundancies) imposes on states a duty to construct a comprehensive and
adequate system of legal liability around that definition but does this in a
way that might then be understood to be limited by its own provisions in §§2-9.
That effectively changes the character of the definition from one grounded in
harm to one grounded in violation of a set of quite specific provisions which,
by their listing also acquire the character of international law binding when appropriately
transposed (subject to state reservation). That leaves one with the possibility that the
human rights referenced in Article 1 (economic activities that cause harm) are
actually reduced to a subset of those harms defined by the provisions
referenced in Article 6. That, in turn, creates a dissonance with the scope
provisions of Article 3 § 3 (“This legally binding instrument shall cover all
human rights”). Though in fairness, the
scope provision provides no grounding—it can as easily reference all legally
mandatory provisions that are styled “human rights” or all harm that impacts
humans. Between Article 3’s vagueness stand two potentially distinct ways of
approaching the solidification of obligation (to which legal liability may be
attached). On the one hand we have a
harm principle and on the other a rights principle.
The Treaty is indifferent to the resolution of this potential tension, and that can only produce bad law. And, indeed, it is possible to see in this the tragedy of the transformation of law form tool to fetish. BY making a fetish of the law of human rights, the drafters reduced the value of human rights as a basis for framing the remedial rights of individuals (protection from harm in economic activities) and for using law as a powerful (framework) tool for organizing markets and regulatory bases for compliance, prevention, and mitigation.
The Treaty is indifferent to the resolution of this potential tension, and that can only produce bad law. And, indeed, it is possible to see in this the tragedy of the transformation of law form tool to fetish. BY making a fetish of the law of human rights, the drafters reduced the value of human rights as a basis for framing the remedial rights of individuals (protection from harm in economic activities) and for using law as a powerful (framework) tool for organizing markets and regulatory bases for compliance, prevention, and mitigation.
In the next post we consider some of the issues raised in
the specific provisions of Article 6.
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