Seminar series ISSR programme 2020

No
Research

18 February 2020

'Historical Icelandic volcanism and air pollution in Scotland'
Martin Kirkbride and Alistair Dawson, Geography and Environmental Sciences.

2 March

Public Lecture Crispin Reed hosted by Dr Beverley Searle
From Scrymgeour to Skyscrapers and other built environment

9 April 2020

Social Sciences Research in the time of COVID-19: Challenges and ways forward

23 April 2020

Seminar – 'Positioning urban policy at the foreground of innovation in urban studies/science'
Professor Sue Parnell, University of Bristol.

28 April 2020

ISSR/RIS Funding Panel – Connecting with the current funding landscape

4 May 2020

'Immigration and Refugee Issues – a View of/from Germany'
Prof Philip Anderson, Regensburg University of Applied Sciences, Germany.

20 May 2020 2pm

ISSR Panel – Having an Impact on Policy: A Practical Guide
Researchers have an opportunity to influence the world of government policy in a number of ways but often it seems as if doing so is restricted to a select few. This session will scotch a few myths and offer a few suggestions on how to get your research noticed by policymakers. The discussion will be led by Nick Bibby, director of the Scottish Policy & Research Exchange. Join on Teams

Institute for Social Sciences Research (ISSR)
No
Yes
Details of our 2020 seminar series

Business and Human Rights Network: Practitioner Insight talks

No
Research

This series is intended to benefit students on the LLM Business and Human Rights (LW51128) and Corporate Sustainability and ESG Law (LW52146) Modules. However, the events are open to all graduate and undergraduate students and staff across the University of Dundee School of Humanities, Social Sciences and Law, the Centre for Energy, Petroleum and Mineral Law & Policy (CEPMLP) and School of Business.

The series is convened and chaired by Dr Claire Methven O’Brien, Reader in Law and Director of the University of Dundee LLM Business and Human Rights.

Claire O'Brien

Session 1

Tulika Bansal

Speaker Tulika Bansal
Independent Business and Human Rights Expert
Title: Human Rights Impacts in the Fisheries and Aquaculture sectors: Cases from across the globe

Location: Scrymgeour 4.01
Date: Tuesday 12 March
Time: 17:00

Tulika Bansal is Business and Human Rights expert and independent consultant with 17 years experience working with multinational companies, governments, national human rights institutions, UN agencies and civil society organizations looking at human rights impacts in different sectors. For 12+ years she worked at the Danish Institute for Human Rights (DIHR), where she co-led the Institute's work on human rights impact assessment, and conducted over 20 such impact assessments across the globe in various sectors including agriculture, tourism, oil and gas, and more recently in fisheries and aquaculture. She led and participated in such in-depth field assessments in the Chilean salmon farming industry, the Bangladesh capture fisheries sector and the Honduran lobster fishing sector, documenting the human rights issues in these industries and calling for action by companies and governments. Tulika's geographical expertise lies in Latin America and Asia, and she is now based in India.

Session 2

Julie Vallet

Speaker Ms Julie Vallat
Vice President Ethics Human Rights, L’Oréal

Title: TBC

Location: Scrymgeour 2.12
Date Friday 15 March
Time 14:00

Before joining L’Oréal, Julie Vallat worked from 2000 as Legal Counsel for not-for-profit organizations, such as “Medecins du Monde” (French Doctors).

She then served from 2004 as Legal Counsel for the National French Department of Justice – Central Authority Division – in charge of implementing some International Treaties and Conventions, including Hague conventions against child abduction, and European conventions related to legal aid.

From 2006 she was a Barrister (Paris Bar) in the law firm Veil Jourde and partners, specializing in Human Rights and International Law, in particular in Burma.

During ten years, from 2009 to 2019, Julie Vallat was Head of Human Rights at Total, within the Corporate Legal Department / Compliance & Social Responsibility Division. Expert in international law, she managed a team of lawyers and lead a global network of local representatives to address human rights and socio-environmental risks in complex environments across the world, drawing up innovative solutions to enabling compliance with UN standards.

In June 2019, she joined L’Oréal as VP Ethics and Human Rights. In partnership with internal and external experts, she is mapping human rights risks and emerging issues to build roadmaps and appropriate action plans.

Session 3

Juile Vallat

Speaker Mr. Shan Saba
Director, Brightwork Staffline Ltd., Founder, Scotland Against Modern Slavery

Title: Business and Human Rights: A global company perspective (tbc)

Location: Scrymgeour 2.08 (HTS) (capacity 60)
Date: Friday 22 March
Time: 12:00

Session 4

Dr James Sinclair

Speaker Dr James Sinclair
Director of Consulting Sustainable Procurement and Human Rights, Verisk Maplecroft

Title: Top Down, Bottom Up or Both: how best to identify and treat business and human rights impacts

Location: Dalhousie 3G02 LT1 (HTS) (capacity 120)
Date: Tuesday 26 March
Time: 14:00

James is Director of Consulting within the Sustainable Procurement and Human Rights team at Verisk Maplecroft. He is an English lawyer and commercial advisor with 22 years' experience, 17 of which have been in relation to sustainable business practices and international human rights law.

James began his career as a barrister in London and then developed an international litigation practice in Jersey. In 2006 he co-founded a UN award winning organisation that has led the development of the ‘fair labour’ method in South Asia, the Middle East and East Africa. He has been at the forefront of the responsible business agenda since 2007 and has worked with and advised governments, companies, NGOs and industry groups on evolving BHR laws, norms and practices.

In addition to his legal qualifications and experience, James holds degrees in philosophy, politics, economics, international relations and a PhD in international human rights law and political economy from King’s College London. He has published research and thought leadership on responsible business practices in several peer reviewed journals and books.

James specialises in creating clarity from complexity and has a keen understanding of the way in which corporate accountability and human rights laws and practices are developing around the world.

Institute for Social Sciences Research (ISSR)
No
Yes
Spring semester 2024

Business and Human Rights Network 2023 conference

No
Research

This conference will present work from a forthcoming volume of the same title to be edited by Dr. Claire Methven O’Brien, Reader in Law at the University of Dundee, and Prof. Larry Cata Backer, Penn State University, USA.

Concept note for conference

"Due Diligence” is rapidly becoming a powerful tool in efforts to embed human rights and sustainability norms law in the activities and decision-making processes of economic actors–corporations, financial institutions, and other entities. In proposing a Directive on Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence, the European Commission (2022/0051 (COD)) explained:

“Using the existing international voluntary standards on responsible business conduct, an increasing number of EU companies are using value chain due diligence as a tool to identify risks in their value chain and build resilience to sudden changes in the value chains, but companies may also face difficulties when considering to use the value chain due diligence for their activities. . . Mostly large companies have been increasingly deploying due diligence processes as it can provide them with a competitive advantage.7 This also responds to the increasing market pressure on companies to act sustainably as it helps them avoid unwanted reputational risks vis-à-vis consumers and investors that are becoming increasingly aware of sustainability aspects.”

Some European States have enacted statutes imposing due diligence requirements for the activities of large enterprises. These include France (Loi relative au devoir de vigilance, 2017), and Germany (Sorgfaltspflichtengesetz, 2021). Other EU Member States (Belgium, the Netherlands, Luxembourg, and Sweden) are planning to do so in the near future. In addition, other regulatory efforts, like the Non-Financial Reporting Directive (Directive 2014/95/EU) require companies to report on how sustainability issues affect their performance, position, and development, as well as how such issues impact on people, and the environment.

“Due diligence” is a central element of the UN Guiding Principles for Business and Human Rights and the UN Framework’s Second Pillar, corporate responsibility to respect human rights. Its driving idea has been to align corporate activities with international normative human rights and sustainability standards, hence addressing governance ‘gaps’ associated with globalisation, promoting economic activity that treats all parts of global value chains with equal respect. The specific objectives of human rights due diligence in the UNGPs are to identify, prevent, mitigate, and account for how companies address their adverse human rights impacts. The process includes assessing actual and potential impacts, integrating, and acting on those findings, tracking responses, and communicating with others about how those impacts were addressed. In addition, human rights due diligence would make it easier to adopt appropriate policies of prevention, mitigation, and remediation, by identifying classes of activities with potential to human rights.

This Workshop-Conference brings together a number of the contributors to the exploration of the critical issues that arise from mandatory human rights due diligence laws to be published in book The current state and future trajectories of human rights due diligence laws: New Legal Norms on Human Rights Due Diligence (Larry Catá Backer and Claire Methven O’Brien (eds); Routledge, forthcoming 2024). Collectively, through this volume, these analysts will contribute to a deeper understanding on the emerging law of due diligence, especially as it touches on the human rights and sustainability elements of economic activities, whether undertaken by public or private organizations. These essays will weave together the emerging trajectories of due diligence and its critical role in framing contemporary systems of human rights and sustainability measures.

Conference presentations

Larry Catá Backer, Human Rights Due Diligence in the UNGPs

This chapter seeks to situate the concept of due diligence from its origins in the UN Guiding Principles for Business and Human Rights. The development of the concept is examined with reference to its development between 2006 and the start of the mandate of John Ruggie as Special Representative to the UN Secretary General to the unanimous endorsement of the UNGP in 2011 by the Human Rights Council. The transformation of the concept from an operational level mechanism at the core of the corporate responsibility to respect human rights in the UNGP 2nd Pillar to its key role as the embodiment of compliance based legality respecting the management of global production is then considered. Due diligence has become more than a method for more efficient operation of markets driven nudging (and thus disciplining) of economic behaviours. Due diligence has assumed a normative role as well. It serves as the means through which economic actors may become embedded in complex webs of interlinked administrative legalities that start with international normative projects, their transposition into domestic (or multilateral) legal orders, and their delegation first to the national administrative apparatus and then in its operational elements to the private actors who are expected to serve as the front line administrators of a global multi-layered system. The relationship between the precisely drawn 2nd Pillar due diligence concept, and the 1st Pillar state duty to protect human rights, along with the 3rd Pillar remedial obligation is considered. The transposition of these mechanisms to other regulatory frameworks is then explore.

Rachel Chambers and Anil Yilmaz Vastardis, Human Rights Due Diligence and Disclosure Regimes

In this chapter, we address the legalization of human rights due diligence (HRDD) via disclosure requirements, the interactions between these areas, and the consequences of their conjunction. Within business and human rights, disclosure and transparency measures were among the first standards to be legalized through legislation, such as Dodd-Frank section 1502 (2010), EU Non-Financial Reporting Directive 2014, and the California Supply Chain Transparency Act 2012. It was expected under these laws that companies would carry out HRDD prior to issuing disclosures. The experience with the legalization of disclosure standards provides valuable lessons for understanding the impact of legalization itself and the effectiveness of various types of legalizations in this area, but also for understanding how far mandatory disclosure requirements can go in indirectly imposing HRDD requirements on companies. In order to analyze the relationship between disclosure rules and HRDD, this chapter will consider this early conjunction between disclosure and HRDD, and the latest iteration, namely disclosure obligations as part of HRDD laws such as the French Law on the Corporate Duty of Vigilance. With the seeming progression of legalization of business and human rights norms from disclosure obligations to process obligations (HRDD), there remains an enduring role of disclosure, for instance in securities laws in the United States. We ask: how can disclosure promote HRDD, and how can HRDD elevate the quality of disclosure?

Carola Glinski, Relationship of Human Rights Due Diligence to Civil and Tort Law

Human rights (and sustainability) due diligence of corporations and other economic actors have for long been discussed in the international arena but has only recently, with national codifications based upon the UN Guiding Principles led to binding legal outcomes, such as in France (2017), Germany (2021) and the EU (draft). At the same time, long-standing attempts to hold companies liable under tort law for damages caused by their subsidiaries or suppliers abroad are now seeing some success, following in particular the English rulings in Chandler v. Cape and Lungowe v Vedanta. Indeed, the duty of care in the tort of negligence has always provided for a doctrinal basis and for relevant criteria to hold companies liable for not having carried out due care (or due diligence) within their sphere of impact, and thus for a valuable source of law for human rights due diligence. In its first part, the chapter highlights the doctrinal parallels and the mutual impact between human rights due diligence and tort law, as discussed in literature and case law. In its second part, the chapter turns to the new due diligence laws. These take different approaches to the issue of liability, by either codifying liability, excluding liability, or remaining silent on the issue. The chapter analyses the changes caused by these codifications in the relation between human rights due diligence and tort law.

Susan Maslow; David Snyder; and Patrick Miller, Human Rights Due Diligence in Contract Law

Human rights due diligence norms can be legalized, as well as operationalized, through contractual commitments. The contractual obligation is binding as a matter of contract law regardless of whether any obligation is imposed by legislative act or judicial decision. By entering into contracts requiring HRDD, companies can turn soft law, or even mere norms, into hard-law obligations. To facilitate these contracts, a working group of the American Bar Association Business Law Section published Model Contract Clauses reflecting the UN Guiding Principles and the OECD Guidance on HRDD, enabling companies to make HRDD “legally effective and operationally likely.” This chapter will explain the role that contracts can play in providing enforceable HRDD obligations. While in many cases these contractual obligations may be considered self-imposed, several jurisdictions now explicitly or implicitly require the use of HRDD contracts. Even older strict liability laws (like the US import ban for goods made with forced labor) effectively push parties toward HRDD contracts: traditional contractual approaches centered on “representations and warranties” and infamous “tickbox” questionnaires are notoriously ineffective, meaning that import will be prohibited. Moving contracts to the more effective HRDD regime allows for better supply chain control. The greater effectiveness derives in part from the operational as well as the legal role of contracts: HRDD contracts set forth the parties’ expectations, telling the supplier what it must do, and often how to do it, in order to be paid. Such contracts and the HRDD reporting requirements they impose increase the likelihood of compliance, successful import, and better human rights outcomes.

Claire Methven O’Brien, EU Due Diligence Legislation

In 2022, the two successive draft texts were published for a European Union corporate sustainability due diligence directive, first, by the European Commission, and then by the European Council. This chapter first presents the background and context for these proposals, both of which anticipate due diligence duties for large companies relating to corporate harms to human rights and the environment, as well as climate change. This part also addresses the process relating to the draft laws in the EU Regulatory Scrutiny Board. Next, the chapter outlines the main features of the regulatory scheme envisaged in the EU’s 2022 draft due diligence laws. The chapter then evaluates the draft Directives’ approach on important elements from point of view of human rights standards, including the UNGPs, as well as wider European human rights jurisprudence and tort law. Finally, the chapter identifies key transformations and deformations implicit in the EU’s putative approach to the legalization of the corporate human responsibility to respect human rights and due diligence and highlights associated challenges for implementation, remediation, and accountability.

Justine Nolan and Shelley Marshall, Sector and Thematic Due Diligence Laws

This paper assesses whether human rights due diligence (HRDD) is being institutionalized in such a way to foster robust mechanisms to address human rights abuses in supply chains, particularly in regions human rights are not respected and enforced. We consider the power of HRDD regulation as a stand-alone mechanism or as a complement to other approaches. The emergence and development of HRDD in the business and human rights field in the last ten years has led to some subtle and not-so-subtle shifts in approaches from government, business, civil society, trade unions, and workers in how they identify and communicate risk and impact around human rights. For some, HRDD might be seen as a transformative concept that can revitalize and formalize corporate accountability for human rights, but for others, it might be viewed more as a risk management tool that will superficially but not substantively address rights abuses in supply chains. What is clear, is that while the concept of HRDD has increased in prominence in recent years, there remains significant ambiguity around its preventative value and potential to address corporate human rights harms in supply chains. The development of HRDD stems from decades of increasing pressure on companies and states to tackle labor rights abuses in supply chains. Business and human rights regulatory approaches have long been dominated by a reliance on self-regulation and broad top-down approaches that often fail to substantively engage rights holders or consider sectoral synergies and dissonance. Will emerging HRDD initiatives be any different? HRDD was first formally articulated in the United Nations Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights in 2011 as an expected standard of conduct for business, but its form and implementation are open to multiple interpretations. It has since been incorporated into subsequent regional and international documents in the business and human rights field, as well as mandated in national legislation. Several of these initiatives have a sector-specific or thematically focused approach. This paper begins by canvassing the purpose and framework of key regulatory HRDD initiatives with an emphasis on sectoral or thematic approaches to regulating corporate conduct. This is followed by a critical analysis of varieties of HRDD as evidenced in these approaches.

Lucas Roorda, Human Rights Due Diligence and Foreign Liability Claims

An increasing number of states are adopting mandatory human rights due diligence (mHRDD) legislation, a development which may gain a significant boost once the European Union adopts its Directive on Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence. The current proposal for the Directive contains a provision that would allow victims to sue parent or lead companies within the scope of the Directive for harms arising out of insufficient due diligence policies or practices, regardless of where those harms actually took place. The Directive is still under negotiation and its scope and content may be subject to change, but in broad terms, civil liability for failing to do proper human rights due diligence has broad support: not just in the EU, but also globally given its inclusion in drafts of the proposed binding instrument on business and human rights. This contribution maps the potential impact of such provisions on existing litigation against corporate human rights abuses, which mostly consists of ‘foreign direct liability’ (FDL) lawsuits. Specifically, it discusses how civil liability for violating mHRDD provisions affects procedural obstacles in FDL cases: adjudicative jurisdiction, applicable law, disclosure and access to information, and financing. While none of these obstacles are intentionally or explicitly addressed by the proposed Directive, nor by other domestic mHRDD instrument, the construction of their respective liability provisions can result in indirect impacts on how victims experience and overcome such obstacles. The contribution identifies which parameters determine the effectiveness of these indirect impacts from the perspective of the victims’ right of access to court, and closes with a general reflection on the desirability of these indirect results versus more explicit amendments to civil procedure and practice.

Sara Seck, Relationship to Human Rights Due Diligence in International Environmental, Climate, and Sustainability Law

The concept of due diligence has a long history in international environmental law. It is often associated with the ‘do no harm’ principle expressed in 1972 in Principle 21 of the Stockholm Declaration and moderately revised in the 1992 Rio Declaration on Environment and Development: ‘States have … the sovereign right to exploit their own resources pursuant to their own environmental and developmental policies, and the responsibility to ensure that activities within their jurisdiction or control do not cause damage to the environment of other States or of areas beyond the limits of national jurisdiction.’ While this principle could be interpreted to impose an obligation of result, it has generally been understood as an obligation of due diligence. It is often described as a norm of customary international law and has been incorporated into many multilateral environmental agreements. The do no harm principle also underlies the influential work of international legal bodies, notably the International Law Commission’s Draft Articles on the Prevention of Transboundary Environmental Harm. This chapter will trace the history of due diligence in international environmental law, beginning with the do no harm rule but moving beyond to consider related principles including precaution (Rio Principle 15), environmental impact assessment (Rio Principle 17), and procedural environmental rights to information, participation, and justice (Rio Principle 10). The chapter will then consider the relationship between due diligence and related norms of international environmental law (climate law, biodiversity law, and pollution law – the triple planetary crisis) and the emergence of human rights due diligence laws in the business and human rights context.

Birgit Spiesshofer, Supply Chain Due Diligence Law in Germany

On July 22, 2021, the Act on Corporate Due Diligence Obligations in Supply Chains (Supply Chain Act) was published in the German Federal Law Gazette and will come into force on Jan. 1, 2023. Roma locuta, causa finita? Not at all. The German Supply Chain Act is only a further milestone in the regulatory program laid down in particular in the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights (UNGP), the OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises, and the National Action Plan for Business and Human Rights (NAP) – international and national soft law – and paves the way for corresponding EU supply chain legislation and its Europe-wide implementation. The Act establishes the responsibility of companies for the implementation of human rights and environmental due diligence in their own organization and group of companies as well as in their supply chains as their own duty of care, the key elements of which are laid down in §§ 3 et seq. Supply Chain Act. The human rights and environmental due diligence introduced by the Supply Chain Act raises many questions, both in principle and in detail. One of the key issues is whether the due diligence obligations are (merely) procedural obligations, in particular, whether they require (only) to undertake best efforts, or, whether at least some of the provisions contain a duty to achieve results. The draft EU Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive takes up the basic conceptual features of the Supply Chain Act. However, it does contain significant deviations that may lead to an adjustment and revision of the Supply Chain Act.

Carlos M. Vázquez and Eric R. Biel, US Measures on Human Rights Due Diligence

Much of the examination of emerging legal regimes on human rights due diligence (HRDD) has focused on activities in the European Union (EU), centering on the European Commission’s adoption in February 2022 of a draft directive on “corporate sustainability due diligence” – as well as initiatives at the member state level, notably in Germany. This in turn has led to a natural interest in whether the United States might at some point develop a similar HRDD model as a centerpiece of a broader strategy to promote and enforce standards for responsible business conduct. Our analysis of U.S. measures to give legal effect to HRDD concludes that any expectation of a U.S. legal framework similar in structure to that of the EU is unlikely for a variety of reasons. Rather, the U.S. approach to advancing the objectives of HRDD to date has been – and in our view will continue to be – driven by a series of separate initiatives, only loosely and informally coordinated under the ambit of a National Action Plan (NAP) on Responsible Business Conduct due to be finalized by mid-2023. (This will be the second U.S. NAP, following one issued at the very end of the Obama Administration in December 2016.). Key elements of the U.S. approach include trade measures such as enforcement of Section 307 of the Tariff Act of 1930, as amended in 2016; the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act, signed into law in December 2021; and the novel factory-level “rapid response mechanism” procedure under the US-Mexico-Canada Agreement. Another area currently receiving increased attention – including in the context of the NAP – is public procurement, where there can be both “carrots” and “sticks” to incentivize and/or punish corporate performance. These, of course, differ considerably from an EU-type reporting and disclosure model. In the United States, reporting and disclosure efforts have been led at the state level, notably in California. However, there now is a range of work at the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) centred on the different pillars of Environmental Social and Governance (ESG): the criteria used in particular by investors to assess companies’ “sustainability” behaviour and the attendant risks of investing in them. SEC regulatory activity is much further along to date on the “E” and “G” elements – environmental and governance – with the “S” as a significant laggard. But there is now a heightened focus on what has been termed “human capital” disclosure – which, depending on its scope, could reach beyond a company’s own operations to also cover labor rights issues in its supply chains. If sustained advocacy from civil society organizations succeeds in prompting greater interest from both executive and legislative branch officials, and if some businesses see focused human rights/labour measures as in their own interest (as has happened in the EU), we could see an SEC-enforced HRDD disclosure process as a more focused U.S. approach that is most comparable to the EU’s regulatory measures.

Institute for Social Sciences Research (ISSR)
No
Yes
The current state and future trajectories of human rights due diligence laws (2022)

Business and Human Rights Network: external speaker talks

No
Research

This series is intended to benefit students on the LLM Business and Human Rights (LW51128) and Corporate Sustainability and ESG Law (LW52146) Modules. However, the events are open to all graduate and undergraduate students and staff across the University of Dundee School of Humanities, Social Sciences and Law, the Centre for Energy, Petroleum and Mineral Law & Policy (CEPMLP) and School of Business.

Session 1

Part 1: Chinese State-Owned Companies and Investment in Latin America and Europe

Part 2: The Conundrums of Current Iterations of ESG in Market Economies-Utah et al v. Walsh: Challenging the Biden Administration's Rulemaking Incorporating of Certain ESG Factors in Pension Investment Decisions

Speaker

Prof. Larry Cata Backer
Penn State University, School of Law and School of International Affairs

Slide presentation: ‘ESG Wars

Session 2 

Scotland Against Modern Slavery - the role of business

Speaker

Mr. Shan Saba
Director, Brightwork Staffline Ltd., Founder, Scotland Against Modern Slavery

Location: LT1 Dalhousie
Date: Friday 3 March
Time: 11:00

Session 3

African Experience on Business and Human Rights

Speaker

Prof. Damilola S. Olawuyi
Professor and UNESCO Chair on Environmental Law and Sustainable Development, Hamad Bin Khalifa University Qatar; Member of UN Working Group on Business and Human Rights

Location: Old Medical School, Room 2.03
Date: Thursday 9 March
Time: 11:00

Session 4 

Risky Business: Some TWAIL Reflections on the Sources of Information for Risk Analysis Under the German Supply Chain Law - Lieferkettensorgfaltspflichtengesetz (LkSG)

Speaker
Caroline Omari Lichuma
PhD Candidate Georg-August Universität, Göttingen; Postdoctoral Research and Development Specialist, University of Luxembourg

Location: 4.01 Scrymgeour
Date: Postponed
Time: Postponed

Session 5 

Business and Human Rights: Ghana’s Approach to an Evolving Agenda

Speaker

Ms. Diana Asonaba Dapaah
Deputy Attorney General, Government of Ghana; Doctoral Candidate, University of Cape Town

Location: 4.01 Scrymgeour
Date: Thursday 23 March
Time: 17:00

Session 6 

Contracting for Human Rights – Experiences from the Responsible Contracting Project and Emerging Practices

Speaker

Mr. Daniel Schonfelder
European Legal Adviser, Deutsche Bahn; Responsible Contracting Project, Rutgers University

Location: 4.01 Scrymgeour
Date: Monday 27 March
Time: 16:00

Institute for Social Sciences Research (ISSR)
No
Yes
Details and resources from our 2023 external speaker talks

UN business and human rights treaty seminar series

No
Research

The world faces unprecedented and inter-linked environmental, economic and social challenges with profound implications for human rights. Besides climate change, catastrophic biodiversity loss and unsustainable resource consumption, these include demographic change, deepening global inequalities and trends of asset concentration, as highlighted during the Covid-19 pandemic. Meanwhile financialisation and the commercialisation of the public sphere and private communications carry implications for democracy’s ability to sustain itself that are still emerging.

Corporations, their activities, influence, incentive structures and business models are deeply implicated in such problems. This raises the question, through what international standards and mechanisms should corporate human rights impacts be addressed? Recent decades have witnessed an explosion of new initiatives, from individual company codes of conduct to multi-lateral trade, investment and financial instruments, sustainability reporting rules and supply chain legislation. In the United Nations (UN) attempts to define international human rights standards addressed to business have spanned several decades. In 2011, the Human Rights Council endorsed the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights (UNGPs), a soft-law framework.

A parallel process to develop a business and human rights treaty launched in 2014 has struggled to make progress.  Yet interest from key players suggests that a framework treaty on business and human rights, as proposed by  Dr. Claire Methven O’Brien, Baxter Fellow and Lecturer in Law at the University of Dundee, might offer a route to break the impasse. To explore this possibility further, this series of inter-disciplinary online seminars will convene internationally-recognised scholars and experts to address questions including:

  • What should be the scope and content of a framework treaty on business and human rights, taking into account existing standards, current problems and future needs?
  • What institutional design features could help to make framework treaty regime effective?
  • What lessons can be learned from experience under other international framework treaties?
  • How can more constructive diplomacy on a framework treaty be fostered?
  • How can we optimise the contribution of a framework treaty in addressing threats to human rights from business activities, but also wider global governance challenges, now and in the future?

Seminar series

Our online seminar series 2021 covered the topics of:

  • Framework instruments and human rights treaties: insights from experience
  • A business and human rights framework treaty: contours and challenges
  • Supporting the operation of a framework treaty in practice
  • Business and human rights: governance challenges in an era of transition
  • Links to the business and human rights governance constellation
  • Next steps: how to move the treaty process forward

Online seminar series part I:  September 2021

1. Framework instruments and human rights treaties: insights from experience.
Wednesday 15 September 2021 12:00-13:30 BST

This opening seminar will draw together leading experts to examine the operation of framework-style instruments in other policy domains, including international labour regulation, indigenous peoples’ rights, environment and climate change, as well as existing international human rights treaties. The panel will explore the strengths and challenges of framework instruments in such contexts, their normative structure and institutional design, as well as factors influencing their effectiveness in practice – providing a platform to reflect on the possible merits of a framework-style treaty in the business and human rights domain.

Panellists include Prof Barbara Koremenos (University of Michigan, USA), Dr Claire Charters (University of Auckland, New Zealand), Prof Shin-Ichi Ago (Ritsumeikan University, Japan), Dr Annalisa Savaresi (University of Eastern Finland, University of Stirling), Dr Jacques Hartmann (University of Dundee)

The seminar will be chaired by Dr Claire Methven O'Brien (University of Dundee)

View on YouTube

2. A business and human rights framework treaty: contours and challenges.
Thursday 23 September 2021, 12:00-13:30 BST

In light of Dr. Claire Methven O’Brien’s 2020 and 2021 proposed draft framework treaty texts, this seminar will seek leading experts’ reflections on the objectives and role of a business and human rights treaty seen from the perspective of other fields of international law, including trade, investment, labour, international private and humanitarian law and regional human rights treaties. This will provide a platform to explore strengths and weaknesses of a framework approach to a business and human rights treaty as well as what should be its main elements.

Panellists include Prof Peter Muchlinski (SOAS, University of London), Dr Eva Jueptner (University of Dundee), Dr Alex Ansong (Ghana Institute of Management and Public Administration), Prof Dr Markus Krajewski (FAU, Germany), Dr Nicholas Bueno (UniDistance Suisse, Switzerland), Prof. Olga Martin-Ortega (University of Greenwich, UK) and  Prof Humberto Cantú Rivera (University of Monterrey, Mexico).

The seminar will be chaired by Dr Claire Methven O'Brien (University of Dundee)

View on YouTube

3. Supporting the operation of a framework treaty in practice.
Thursday 30 September 2021, 14:00-15:30 BST

How should a business and human rights framework treaty regime be designed to have greatest impact preventing and remediating abuses, and securing effective accountability of duty-bearers? What obstacles to effectiveness can be avoided? What insights about its potential – and likely limits - as an engine of human rights governance in the corporate sector are available from existing studies? This seminar will draw together leading experts to identify institutional design elements and contextual factors shaping the influence of a business and human rights framework instrument.

Panelists include Professor Başak Çalı (Hertie School, Berlin), Professor Erika George (University of Utah), Dr Anja Mihr (Center on Governance through Human Rights, Berlin), Dr Tom Pegram (University College London) and Dr Michael Riegner (Humboldt University Berlin).

The seminar will be chaired by Dr Claire Methven O'Brien (University of Dundee)

View on YouTube

Online seminar series part II:  October 2021

4. Business and human rights: governance challenges in an era of transition

Wednesday 6 October 2021, 12:00–13:30

This seminar will set the wider context for the business and human rights treaty discussion by exploring the human rights dimensions of key social, economic and environmental governance challenges; how the business sector is implicated in them; and what might be the contribution of a UN business and human rights framework treaty regime to their effective resolution.

Panellists include Professor Lorna McGregor (University of Essex), Professor Morris Altman (University of Dundee), Dr Axel Marx (University of Leuven), Professor Brigit Toebes (University of Groningen) and Dr Gale Raj-Reichert (Bard College Berlin).

The seminar will be chaired by Dr Claire Methven O'Brien (University of Dundee)

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5. Links to the business and human rights governance constellation

Thursday 14 October 2021, 14:00–15:30

This panel will consider how a business and human rights framework treaty should connect with wider institutions and mechanisms of business and human rights governance, for instance, in the International Labour Organisation and Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development; sector and value-chain based initiatives; corporate governance, reporting and accounting standards; international financial institutions; regional bodies; and national measures including national action plans on business and human rights.

Panellists include Professor Larry Catá Backer (Pennsylvania State University), Professor Dorothée Baumann-Pauly (University of Geneva), Dr David Birchall (London South Bank University), Dr Jernej Letnar Černič (Nova Univerza, Slovenia), Dr Sorcha McLeod (University of Copenhagen) and Dr Miho Taka (Coventry University).

The seminar will be chaired by Dr Claire Methven O'Brien (University of Dundee)

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Closing seminar: November 2021

6. Next steps: how to move the treaty process forward

Concluding the series, this seminar will reflect on how the UN process can now be steered to a positive conclusion: an effective, consensus-backed instrument that supplies dynamic and effective accountability for business-related human rights impacts now and in the future.

Further details on this seminar will be announced shortly.

Institute for Social Sciences Research (ISSR)
No
Yes
Details and resources from our 2021 seminar series
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