Supporting the Norwegian OECD National Contact Point

Shift was pleased to provide support to the Norwegian National Contact Point (NCP) as it underwent a formal peer review process in 2013 in line with the OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises. Representatives of the NCPs of Canada, Belgium, Colombia, Netherlands and the UK were official members of the peer review delegation. Hungary, Mexico and the OECD Secretariat also participated as observers. In January 2014, the delegation submitted its final report.

Shift provided support in two main ways:

  • Working collaboratively with the Norwegian NCP to support the design, preparation and implementation of the peer review process and to document that process;
  • As a credible, constructive and independent analyst of the information gathered during the process, to report on the strengths and shortcomings of the NCP and provide recommendations for the NCP going forward. This analysis fed directly into the final report by the delegation.

Also see:

Human Rights Reporting and Assurance Frameworks Initiative

The Human Rights Reporting and Assurance Frameworks Initiative (RAFI) is a multistakeholder consultative process that supported the development of the UN Guiding Principles Reporting Framework and its two supporting guidances: implementation guidance for companies that are reporting, and assurance guidance for internal auditors and external assurance providers. The UNGP Reporting Framework, its supporting guidances and additional insights about trends in existing company reporting on human rights are available at www.UNGPreporting.org.

Documentation about the consultative process of RAFI is kindly hosted by the Business & Human Rights Resource Centre. This page provides an overview of the UNGP Reporting Framework — we encourage readers to also visit the Framework’s dedicated website.

In August 2016, Shift began a multi-year, multi-country reporting program that uses the UNGP Reporting Framework to catalyze improved reporting and performance by companies on human rights. Learn more about that program here.

What is the UNGP Reporting Framework?

“The UN Guiding Principles Reporting Framework is an indispensable tool that companies have been waiting for. This tool will mark a major breakthrough in company relations with individuals and communities whose lives they impact.” – John Ruggie, author of the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights

John Ruggie, author of the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights

The UN Guiding Principles Reporting Framework is the first comprehensive guidance for companies to report on human rights issues in line with their responsibility to respect human rights. This responsibility is set out in the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights, which constitute the authoritative global standard in this field. The UNGP Reporting Framework was launched in February 2015.

The Reporting Framework provides a concise set of questions to which any company should strive to have answers in order to know and show that it is meeting its responsibility to respect human rights in practice. It offers companies clear and straightforward guidance on how to answer these questions with relevant and meaningful information about their human rights policies, processes and performance.

The Reporting Framework is supported by two kinds of guidance: implementation guidance for companies that are reporting, and assurance guidance for internal auditors and external assurance providers.

Click here to see the latest news on the UNGP Reporting Framework

How the Reporting Framework Was Developed

The UNGP Reporting Framework was developed through the Human Rights Reporting and Assurance Frameworks Initiative (RAFI). RAFI was co-facilitated by Shift and Mazars through an open, global, consultative process involving representatives from over 200 companies, investor groups, civil society organizations, governments, assurance providers, lawyers and other expert organizations from all regions of the world. Consultations took place in Addis Ababa, Bangkok, Jakarta, London, Manila, Medellin, New York and Yangon.

The Reporting and Assurance Frameworks Initiative was overseen by an Eminent Persons Group. Further information about the project team and the Eminent Persons Group can be viewed here. RAFI was made possible by grants from the governments of Norway, Sweden and the United Kingdom.

“The UN Guiding Principles Reporting Framework equips us to understand what we may face – it reduces the number of unknown unknowns.”

Richard Kooloos, Head of Sustainable Banking, ABN AMRO; early adopter of the UNGP Reporting Framework

Support for the Reporting Framework

The Reporting Framework is supported by an investor coalition of 87 investors representing $5.3 trillion assets under management, by six early adopter companies and by leading institutions including the UN Working Group on business and human rights, the UN Global Compact and the International Integrated Reporting Council.

The Framework is cited and recommended by multiple governments in policy and guidance documents. Hundreds of companies have participated in training and outreach on the Framework, and dozens more are using the Framework for both internal management of human rights as well as for reporting. | Learn more about what supporters and users say about the UNGP Reporting Framework

The UNGP Reporting Framework is, “an essential tool that enables investors to review companies’ understanding and management of human rights risks. It will also guide us in our engagement with companies going forward.” — investor statement of support

Advising the Peruvian Financial Regulator on Improved Corporate Management of Social Conflict

Also see: Overview of our work with financial institutions on implementation of the Guiding Principles | Our report on the cost of corporate-community conflict

From 2012-2015, Shift was pleased to support the Superintendency of Banks, Insurers and Private Pension Funds (SBS) in Peru in the development and implementation of a new regulation to strengthen due diligence in the Peruvian financial sector. The regulation is available in Spanish (official) and English (unofficial) here.

Shift provided advisory support to the SBS regarding the development of a new regulation aimed at mitigating social conflict related to large investment projects in Peru. This initiative responded to the evidence that such conflict can increase credit risk and reduce the creditworthiness of projects and/or their primary suppliers that are directly or indirectly affected by social conflicts. | Jump to our report on the cost of conflict in the extractives sector

In recent years there has been considerable social conflict in Peru around major commercial projects, particularly in the extractive industries and forestry. This has in part resulted from local communities’ concerns about the impacts these projects may have on their livelihoods, welfare and human rights. These conflicts are seen to have implications for the credit risk of individual Peruvian banks, the stability of the Peruvian financial system, and the reputation of Peru as an investment location.

Shift worked with the SBS to look at how the elements of due diligence set out in the Guiding Principles could provide a useful reference point for the planned regulation. This advice focused on the role of effective community dialogue and engagement and grievance handling processes in ensuring that due diligence processes are effective in mitigating risks of social conflict.

The SBS has now issued the new regulation, which requires banks to pursue social and environmental risk management in relation to certain advisory services and loans for particular projects in Peru, including natural resource extraction projects. While the new regulation is framed in terms of social and environmental due diligence in general and emphasizes reduction of systemic risk, its greatest innovation lies in the human rights lens it brings to the requirements of banks, and in turn of their clients, including the assessment of the quality of client companies’ processes for engaging directly with potentially impacted communities and providing channels for them to raise grievances. In this regard, it reflects important features of human rights due diligence emphasized in the Guiding Principles.

During the development of the regulation, Shift was pleased to provide additional support to the SBS including delivering collaborative capacity building workshops for key SBS staff, joint with the Association of Banking Supervisors of the Americas (ASBA), as well as training for representatives from Peruvian banks that are subject to the new regulation.

Advising the International Council of Toy Industries on Alignment with the Guiding Principles

The International Council of Toy Industries (ICTI) CARE Process is a program to promote ethical manufacturing in the toy industry supply chain. Its mission is to enable the worldwide toy industry to ensure that its products are manufactured in safe and humane workplace conditions for factory workers, by providing education and training to key actors in the supply chain, and enforcing a thorough and consistent assurance and factory monitoring. Its initial focus is in China, where 80 percent of the world’s toy volume is manufactured. Its intent is to provide a single, fair, thorough and consistent program to monitor toy factories’ compliance with ICTI’s Code of Business Practices

In 2012, the ICTI Care Process (ICP) asked Shift to help it assess the implications of the Guiding Principles for its work. Through a combination of desk-based research and interviews with representatives of key stakeholder groups, including in China, Shift conducted a high-level gap analysis designed to review and assess the general strengths and weaknesses of the ICP’s processes against the Guiding Principles. Through this review and assessment, Shift developed concrete conclusions and recommendations for consideration by the management and Board of the ICP, with particular attention to education and capacity-building needs required to meet the ICP’s objectives.

Are There Risks in Knowing and Showing?

This speech by Shift General Counsel John Sherman was delivered to the BSR human rights working group on October 22, 2012.

As some of you know, I was a member of John Ruggie’s UN mandate team. We helped him draft the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights. I was a former in house counsel for 30 years. I retired in 2008 as deputy general counsel of National Grid, a large US/UK utility. I was a jack-of-all-trades as a lawyer, but my day job was litigation. My job on the UN mandate team was to speak the voice of the corporate lawyer. I’m now with Shift, a nonprofit 501(c)3 organization that John Ruggie chairs. It’s staffed with people who helped him draft and shape the UNGPs. We’re dedicated to implementing the Guiding Principles.

Our goal in the mandate was both principled and pragmatic—to craft a management system to enable companies to respect human rights, but not to create something so foreign that it would activate the immune systems of companies, which otherwise would send out antibodies to destroy the alien object.

Tonight, I’ve been asked to talk about the risks of a core component of the business responsibility to respect human rights—human rights due diligence. Specifically, I’m gong to talk about the risks that— by knowing their human rights impacts, and by showing what they’re doing to address them— companies may actually increase their legal liability profile, rather than reduce them.

In a nutshell, I think that potential concerns about conducting human rights due diligence can be managed, and that they are more than offset by the benefits of doing it. To explain, I need to review the concept of human rights due diligence and place it in context.

Recap of the Guiding Principles

To review, the Guiding Principles rest upon three independent but interrelated pillars: the state duty to protect against human rights abuses by third parties, including business; the corporate responsibility to respect human rights, which means to avoid infringing on the rights of others and to address negative impacts with which a company is involved; and the need for greater access to effective remedy.

I’m going to focus on the second pillar—the corporate responsibility to respect human rights. It requires businesses to know and show that they are respecting human rights through the following:

First, companies should have a high level policy commitment to respect human rights, supported by operational level policies, training and incentive structures that embed the company’s commitment from the top of the organization to the bottom. (Guiding Principle 16) | See the entire text of the Guiding Principles

Second, companies should have human rights due diligence processes (Guiding Principle 17), consisting of: assessing actual and potential impacts on human rights arising from the company’s own activities and through its business relationships, including assessing them from the perspective of affected stakeholders as well as the company (Guiding Principle 18); integrating the findings from such assessments and taking action to ensure that the company is addressing its impacts coherently, across corporate silos. (Guiding Principle 19); tracking the effectiveness of efforts to address human rights impacts, including through operational level grievance mechanisms (Guiding Principle 20), and communicating these efforts to affected stakeholders, and where appropriate, reporting on them publicly, such as where impacts are or may be severe. (Guiding Principle 21)

Finally, companies should cooperate in legitimate state-based and non-state-based grievance mechanisms to remediate human rights harms that the company caused or contributed to, including by establishing or participating in effective operational level grievance mechanisms. (Guiding Principles 22, 29 and 31)

Concerns About Knowing and Showing

What may concern some is the “knowing and showing” part of the human rights due diligence process, which is at the process at the heart of the corporate responsibility to respect human rights. The perceived risk is that this requires businesses to gather and disclose information for the benefit of their adversaries—in court and in public campaigns. So let’s look at this in some detail.

The two key Guiding Principles are GP 18—Risk Assessment—and GP 21—Communication.

Guiding Principle 18 requires a company to assess the actual and potential adverse human rights impacts with which it may be involved—through its own operations, and also, through its business relationships, such as its supply chain. Assessing risks is of course nothing new for businesses; it is a fundamental requirement of proper corporate governance, because a company cannot properly manage risks that it does not know exist. And getting involved in human rights problems is a risk for companies, even when measured by the company’s bottom line. Guiding Principle 18 does require businesses to assess their human rights impacts through “meaningful consultation with potentially affected groups and other relevant stakeholders.” However, it does not mandate making the entire risk assessment public. Moreover, it does not require the company “to assess the human rights record of every entity with which they have a relationship.” Rather, it requires them to assess, “the risk that those entities may harm human rights, when acting in connection with the enterprise’s own operations, products or services.” (See Interpretive Guide section 7.8.)

Guiding Principle 21 provides that businesses should communicate how they are addressing their human rights impacts, particularly when stakeholders raise concerns. It requires companies to report formally, but only on the risks of severe human rights impacts—i.e., those that are large scale, large scope, or are irremediable.

Here are the requirements for a communication: It should be in a form and frequency that reflects the severity of the impacts. It should be accessible to its intended audiences. It should provide sufficient information to enable a reader assess the adequacy of the company’s response. And most significant for my talk tonight, the communication should “not pose risks to affected stakeholders, personnel or to legitimate requirements of commercial confidentiality.” (Emphasis added).

This language recognizes that businesses have a proper interest in keeping certain matters confidential. To explain this, the Interpretive Guide, prepared by the UN Office of the High Commissioner of Human Rights in December 2011, with Prof. Ruggie’s approval, says, “The legitimate requirements of commercial confidentiality would … include information legally protected against disclosure to third parties.” (See Interpretive Guide section 10.7.)

This recognizes that businesses need a confidential space in which to investigate difficult problems, to evaluate them candidly and realistically, and to communicate them internally, in order to address those problems. GP 21 does not close that space.

Legal Protections

Under US law, this space is protected by doctrines of legal privilege and the work product rule (See (Upjohn v. United States, 339 US 383 [1981]). So I need to give a primer on that, for the non-lawyers in the room. Legal privilege protects communications between an attorney and a client from discovery and use at trial, unless the client waives the privilege. The privilege applies only to the confidential communication itself, but not to the underlying facts. The work product rule provides more limited protection to investigative reports conducted by or for lawyers. It can be overcome by a showing of need by adversaries, such as their inability to get the information in any other reasonable way.

These protections are not boundless. They cannot be abused to, “allow a corporation to funnel its papers and documents into the hands of its lawyers for custodial purposes and thereby avoid disclosure.” (See Radiant Burners, Inc. v. American Gas Association, 320 F.2d 314, 324 [7th Cir., 1963]). One of the things that John Ruggie is fond of saying is that although the Guiding Principles do not impose legal duties on companies, they don’t not exist in a law free zone, either. Existing law requires companies to respect many human rights, such as rights relating to safety, the workplace, and antidiscrimination. In addition, the process requirements of the Guiding Principles are starting to influence the law.

Here are some examples from the US: The US Department of State has published a draft regulation requiring companies who make new investments in Burma—which has recently emerged from decades of military dictatorship—to report on their policies and procedures with respect to human rights, using the Guiding Principles and concepts of human rights due diligence as a reference point. 31 C.F.R. § 537.321. Section 1502 of the Dodd-Frank Act requires companies to conduct due diligence on their supply chain for products containing certain minerals from the Democratic Republic of the Congo, where mining has fueled armed conflict resulting in the deaths of millions. Section 1502 in turn has spawned California legislation regulating state procurement of products containing conflict minerals from companies in violation of Section 1502. And the California Transparency in Supply Chains Act of 2010 requires large retail and manufacturing companies doing business in California to disclose the efforts they have taken to eliminate slavery and human trafficking from their supply chains.

And then, last but not least, there’s the potential for complicity in gross human rights abuses. That requires some focused attention, because it’s the subject of a separate Guiding Principle. Guiding Principle 23(c) says that companies should treat the risk of causing or contributing to gross human rights abuses—e.g., torture, death, slavery—as a legal compliance issue wherever they operate, even if the applicable legal standards may be unclear.

In other words, a company should act on the prudent assumption that it may legally liable if it causes or contributes to such abuses, in some court somewhere in the world. Kiobel v. Shell is such a case. It was argued before the US Supreme Court twice, in March and October, 2012. Plaintiffs alleged that in the early 1990s, the defendant oil companies had enlisted the support of the Nigerian government to suppress environmental protests by residents against defendants’ oil and gas exploration and production activities in the Ogoni Region of Nigeria. They alleged that members of the Nigerian military “shot and killed Ogoni residents and attacked Ogoni villages—beating, raping, and arresting residents and destroying or looting property—all with the assistance of defendants.”(See Kiobel v. Shell, 621 F.3d 111, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 19382, 28M29 (2d Cir. 2010).

The case was argued before the US Supreme Court on March 7, 2012, on the question of whether corporations—as distinct from their directors, officers, and employees—could be sued in US Courts under the Alien Tort Statute, or “ATS” (codified at 28 U.S.C. § 1350) for their involvement in gross human rights abuses outside the US. Afterwards, the Court requested additional briefing and argument on the Statute’s extraterritorial reach and a second round of argument was heard on October 1, 2012 (See Kiobel v. Shell, ___S. Ct. ___ , 2012 U.S. LEXIS 1998 (2012)).

The ATS has been a significant legal tool for victims seeking to hold international companies legally accountable for gross human rights abuses; a discussion of the merits of the issues before the Court in Kiobel is beyond the scope of this paper. However, the ATS is not the only game in town. For example, in 2007, the SRSG’s identified an “expanding web of potential corporate liability for international crimes – imposed through national courts.” (See Business and Human Rights: Mapping International Standards of Responsibility and Accountability for Corporate Acts, UN Doc. A/HRC/4035 (February 9, 2007), para 22). Countries forming part of this “emerging web” include the United Kingdom and The Netherlands. In those countries, the interaction between their domestic law, and their ratification of the Statute of the International Criminal Court, leads to the potential imposition on corporate actors of criminal liability for genocide, crimes against humanity, and war crimes.

“In this fluid setting,” Prof. Ruggie wrote, “simple laws of probability alone suggest that corporations will be subject to increased liability for international crimes in the future.”

The Role of Lawyers

So what’s a company to do, given the potential risks of legal liability for failing to respect human rights? I think that it would be highly prudent for companies to call on its lawyers for help where it suspects that it has been involved, or has a risk of becoming involved, in gross human rights abuses, in order to take appropriate action. Indeed, Guiding Principle 23 compels such an approach. In such a case, appropriate assertion of legal privilege and work product would not be incompatible with human rights due diligence. Those protections do not apply to underlying facts communicated, and even investigations subject to the attorney work product rule may be disclosed upon an appropriate showing of need.

Caveats

But I’d like to add some caveats. First, I do not want to suggest that a company’s responsibility for respecting all human rights should be vested in a company’s legal department and made a matter solely of legal compliance and legal risk. Under the Guiding Principles, the challenge for companies is also about improving relationships and changing ways of doing business. Guiding Principle 23(c) simply recognizes that, regardless of the uncertainty of the law in particular jurisdictions, a company’s involvement in gross human rights abuses would be such an egregious calamity for the company and society that its lawyers should be proactively engaged in preventing it, as they would be engaged in the prevention of any serious corporate crime.

Second, even where assertion of legal protection is justified, a reflexive resort to it, wherever possible, is not a good thing. It may be in tension with the need to head off or reduce problems by building relationships with external stakeholders based on mutual trust. Building trust between companies and stakeholders is the purpose of Guiding Principle 21—and indeed—underpins the corporate responsibility to respect. This requires being candid and open about problems and taking responsibility when things go wrong (See Susskind and Field, Dealing with an Angry Public: The Mutual Gains Approach to Resolving Disputes (Free Press, 1996), pp. 160-177). In the end, the decision to assert legal privilege with respect to assessments of a company’s human rights performance should not be reduced to a simple “on or off” switch—where the default is “on.”

Finally, as one who has spent some time in court defending companies, if the facts demonstrate that one of your own people, or your business partners, is involved in unethical activity, you’re far better off being able to demonstrate that you acted proactively to discover the facts yourself, and tried to deal with it, rather than to be named and shamed afterwards. As John Ruggie said“Conducting due diligence enables companies to identify and prevent adverse human rights impacts. Doing so also should provide corporate boards with strong protection against mismanagement claims by shareholders. In Alien Tort Statute and similar suits, proof that the company took every reasonable step to avoid involvement in the alleged violation can only count in its favour.”

Thank you.

Bringing A Human Rights Lens to Corporate Water Stewardship

In 2015 we published with our partners guidance for companies on respecting the human rights to water and sanitation | See the announcement about the guidance

In 2010, the UN Human Rights Council and UN General Assembly formally recognized the human rights to water and sanitation (HRWS). With the subsequent endorsement of the Guiding Principles in 2011, companies that endorsed the UN Global Compact CEO Water Mandate saw an opportune moment for the development of practical guidance on how business can meet its responsibility to respect the HRWS. In particular, guidance was needed to help companies understand the implications of bringing a human rights lens to their evolving corporate water stewardship practices.

To meet this need, the CEO Water Mandate, together with project partners Shift and the Pacific Institute, and with input from Oxfam America, developed practical guidance for businesses on implementing their responsibility to respect the human rights to water and sanitation. The project benefitted from inputs from a multistakeholder Technical Expert Group.

Initial findings were published in 2012, and the full guidance was published in 2015 (see link above). The first exploratory phase of the project involved identifying international and national legal trends relating to the HRWS, illustrating some of the current challenges businesses face in respecting these rights, as well as the perspectives of potentially affected communities, and lastly identifying areas of potential synergy with companies’ existing water stewardship efforts. The second phase involved development of the guidance, with significant input from companies that endorse the CEO Water Mandate as well as expert stakeholders, on how to implement respect for the HRWS in practice.

Guidance for Companies on Respecting Children’s Right to Be Free From Child Labor

Jump to the guidance

“Participation in this project is very important to Vale, because it contributed directly to our process of continuous improvement in the management of human rights.”

Adolfo Gonçalves, Labour Relations Manager, Vale

The International Labour Organization’s (ILO) International Programme on the Elimination of Child Labour (IPEC) was created in 1992 with the overall goal of the progressive elimination of child labor, which was to be achieved through strengthening the capacity of countries to deal with the problem and promoting a worldwide movement to combat child labor. ILO-IPEC is the largest program of its kind globally and the biggest single operational program of the ILO.

Since its creation in 1920, the International Organisation of Employers (IOE) has been recognized as the only organization at the international level that represents the interests of business in the labor and social policy fields. Today, it consists of national employer organizations from over 140 countries from all over the world.

This joint project of ILO-IPEC and the IOE sought to develop a “Child Labor Guidance Tool” (2012 concept note) that would provide guidance on how companies can avoid child labor and contribute to child labor remediation, whether in their own operations or in their supply chains, through appropriate policies, due diligence and remediation processes that are aligned with ILO Conventions on child labor and the Guiding Principles.

“The ILO-IOE project on business and child labour has provided valuable, cross-functional learning for The Coca-Cola Company on this critical issue. We have benefited from the expert assessment process, which has led to improvements in our policies and due diligence systems.  TCCC would highly recommend this project to companies interested in developing effective systems to identify, prevent, mitigate, and, if necessary, remediate child labour, all while contributing to the creation of an authoritative global guidance tool.”

Ed Potter, [former] Director, Global Workplace Rights, The Coca-Cola Company

In the first stage, Shift developed a protocol and conducted assessments of an initial group of companies from diverse industry sectors, including AngloGold Ashanti, The Coca-Cola Company, Sterling Industries and Vale. The assessments explored alignment with the key elements of the corporate responsibility to respect in relation to the prohibition of child labor, generating important lessons for the project. In 2014, the project team consulted with other companies and expert stakeholders. In December 2015, guidance was published by the ILO and IOE, with support from Shift, to help companies do business with respect for children’s rights.

European Commission Human Rights Sector Guides

“Respect for human rights is part of the recipe for modern business excellence. This guidance meets global standards agreed in the UN while leaving enterprises the necessary flexibility to adapt their approach to their own particular circumstances.”

Antonio Tajani, Vice-President of the European Commission, Enterprise and Industry

Human Rights Guides for Three Sectors

In June 2013, the European Commission issued three guides on implementing the Guiding Principles, tailored for specific industry sectors.

There are three guidance documents, one for each sector:

  • employment and recruitment agencies;
  • information and communication technologies (ICT) companies;
  • oil and gas companies

The guides are written by Shift and the Institute for Human Rights and Business.

> Jump to the guides

What the Guides Do

Each Guide offers practical advice on how to implement the corporate responsibility to respect human rights in day-to-day business operations in each industry through step-by-step guidance. At each step, they summarize what the Guiding Principles expect, offer a range of approaches and examples for how to put them into practice, and link users to additional resources that can support their work. They are intended to help companies “translate” respect for human rights into their own systems and cultures.

How the Guides Were Developed

The Guides were developed over 18 months by Shift and the Institute for Human Rights and Business through extensive research and multistakeholder consultation with representatives from the three industries as well as governments, trade unions, civil society, academia and other experts.

“Business is an increasingly important player in the world of human rights. This guidance aims to help enterprises in Europe and elsewhere to meet the corporate responsibility to respect human rights, as defined by the UN and strongly endorsed by the EU.”

Stavros Lambrinidis, EU Special Representative for Human Rights

Support for the Guides

Jim Baker, Council of Global Unions: “The UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights were derived, on the one hand, from universal human rights standards and, on the other, from real world experience. Human rights, like life itself, cannot be reduced to a checklist or to simple slogans. It is only through understanding and reflection that the Guiding Principles can become ‘simple’ and applicable. These guidance publications are designed to further that process.”

Brent Wilton, International Organisation of Employers: “The three sector guides are comprehensive compendiums which contribute to helping companies in those sectors and beyond gain understanding of the scope of the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights.”

Alexandra Guáqueta, UN Working Group on business and human rights: “Dozens of sectoral guides and tools on how to implement the UN Guiding Principles are being produced. This is a solid indicator of the relevance and high demand for the Guiding Principles. Now users want to know whether the practical guides are actually aligned with the Guiding Principles. A best practice example of such alignment are the new EC Sectoral Guidelines. They capture the essence of the Guiding Principles faithfully, they refer to the interdependence of the state, corporate and remedy pillars, and were formulated after technical research, expert consultations and multi-stakeholder dialogue processes with state, business and civil society actors from across the globe. They will no doubt be a valuable source for practitioners and affected persons alike.”

Advising the Global Network Initiative on a Public Engagement Mechanism

The Global Network Initiative (GNI) is a multistakeholder group of companies, civil society organizations, investors and academics who have created a collaborative approach to protect and advance freedom of expression and privacy in the information and communication technologies (ICT) sector. GNI provides resources for ICT companies to help them address difficult issues related to freedom of expression and privacy, including a framework of principles and implementation guidance. | Also see guidance on implementing the Guiding Principles for ICT companies

As part of the GNI’s Governance Charter, the network has made a commitment to engage the public, in order to provide a platform to share information about GNI, receive feedback, and raise questions or concerns, with a view to strengthening the implementation of GNI’s mission. Shift supported the GNI in the development of this public engagement mechanism through a consultative process involving the different GNI constituent groups and select external experts. In light of these consultations, as well as its own research and expertise, Shift has provided GNI with a confidential report proposing design options for the public engagement mechanism, to inform its internal discussions and decision making.

Advising the Fair Labor Association on Alignment With the Guiding Principles

The Fair Labor Association is a nonprofit organization whose goal is to protect workers’ rights and improve working conditions worldwide. It is a multi-stakeholder initiative of universities, civil society organizations and socially responsible corporations that work to increase accountability and transparency from brands, manufacturers, factories and others involved in global supply chains, and to create lasting solutions to exploitative labor practices. Since its inception as the Apparel Industry Partnership and the development of its Workplaces Code of Conduct and Compliance Benchmarks, the FLA has developed a range of procedures and programs aimed at driving through positive change in supply chains. It has also expanded its membership base beyond the apparel and footwear industry to include companies in other sectors, such as agribusiness and electronics. 

In 2012, Shift helped the FLA assess the implications of the Guiding Principles for its work. The report prepared by Shift analyzed how the FLA’s standards, processes and programs align with the Guiding Principles, and suggested areas for future focus. Since this report was written, the FLA has made a number of changes to its standards and processes.

Shift also provided ad hoc advice to the internal FLA Working Group tasked with reviewing the organization’s Third Party Complaint mechanism.