Document - RESPONSABILITÉ SOCIALE DES ENTREPRISES ET DROITS HUMAINS : l?heure du bilan. Discours prononcé le 24 janvier 2003 par Irene Khan, secrétaire générale d'Amnesty International, à l?occasion du forum The Public Eye on Davos
AI Index: IOR 50/003/2003 Public
Taking stock:
Corporate social responsibility
and human rights
Irene Khan
Secretary-General
Amnesty International
Statement delivered at "PUBLIC EYE ON DAVOS"
Friday 24th January 2003
Thank you for giving me this opportunity to speak to you today at
the Public Eye on Davos. This is a very important forum. By its
very title, this gathering acts as a reminder to the world leaders
attending the World Economic Forum that international civil society
is watching them. This community wants action, not words; it wants
progress, not pronouncements. And it wants corporate
accountability, not public relations.
Last year when I came to the Public Eye in New York, our
discussions were overshadowed by the security concerns following
the attacks of 9/11. These concerns, far from dissipating, have
actually deepened with the threat of military attacks on Iraq. As
some noted economists have pointed out, the economic effects of war
with Iraq will not be good, particularly given the already gloomy
economic climate and the total loss of investor confidence
following the stories of corporate greed and misdemeanour. The mood
at the World Economic Forum is very different from that of two
years ago in Davos or even from last year in New York. The
complacency and confidence of corporate leaders have been
punctured.
At the World Economic Forum they are talking about "building trust"
but are still reluctant to acknowledge that trust was lost, not
when ENRON was exposed last year - but long before that. They have
still to wake up to the message from crowds in Seattle and Genoa,
to listen to those who are gathering in Porto Allegre today. They
have to recognise that trust cannot be built without a radical
reconfiguration of the way business conducts itself, and of its
accountability, not only to its shareholders, investors and
employees but also to the community in which it operates.
I believe that this is a very opportune moment to focus on
corporate social responsibility. I would like to address two
questions:
· First, where have we got to on CSR, particularly when it comes to
human rights? What lessons have we in AI learned from them?
· Second, where should we be going on CSR issues? Can we
continue the past we have trodden so far, or should we be looking
for new ways to strengthen corporate responsibility for human
rights?
CSR and human rights - where do we stand?
Amnesty International first adopted policies to engage with the
private sector on human rights issues some 20 years ago. It was not
until about 10 years ago, however, that such engagement became
systematic. We now have specialised groups in a large number of
countries who are regularly involved in discussions with companies
on human rights issues. All told, this work involves hundreds of
individuals, most of them volunteering their time. They come from
disparate backgrounds but include many people with considerable
experience of the private sector. We work in a variety of ways,
some less controversial than others, to promote human rights in the
corporate sectors, from mass mobilisation to tabling shareholder
resolutions to participating in voluntary schemes like the Global
Reporting Initiative and the UN Global Compact to dialogue and
training of corporate actors.
And what have we learned from our experience? Is CSR just "public
relations"?
First, we can say that, over the past ten years, there has been a
phenomenal growth in private sector interest in human
rights. When we began our work it was difficult to make companies
understand that human rights were relevant to the business world.
Today, over 700 companies are participating in the UN's Global
Compact, which lists human rights as one of the nine principles to
which signatories must commit. Corporate social responsibility and
human rights issues feature prominently on the agenda of the WEF. A
number of large, well-known corporations have made explicit,
written commitment to respect human rights in voluntary codes. This
is the 4th year that Amnesty International and other human rights
groups have been invited to the World Economic Forum. No
responsible corporate CEO would deny that our message is relevant
to the business community.
But, while interest might be widespread, serious commitment
on human rights has been patchy.
There are a few - but I would say only a few - in the corporate
sector who have adopted and applied human rights principles in
their business out of genuine conviction. But more often the shift
has come through public exposure and scandal. Just as disasters
like Exxon Valdez in Alaska, and the disposal of the Brent Spar
platform brought environmental concerns into the limelight, human
rights really popped onto companies' radar screens as a result of
crisis. The execution of the Ogoni 9 in Nigeria and the conduct of
private security firms in Colombia convinced oil giants Shell and
BP to take human rights concerns on board. Evidence linking
diamonds from Sierra Leone with the reprehensible armed opposition
group, the Revolutionary United Front, and its terror tactics of
amputating the limbs of civilians, brought the diamond industry to
the table, to agree to a system of international certification to
weed out conflict diamonds. Allegations of profiting from
"sweatshops" in the supply chain forced apparel companies to look
at human rights concerns.
The key motivating factor in these cases was the exposure and
pressure by NGOs and the risk to reputation. Nestle, the Swiss
confectioner, is still the target of a boycott over its past
policies promoting infant formula over breast milk. Talisman of
Canada may soon conclude a deal, selling its stake in Sudan to an
Indian oil company, because of sustained pressure from Canadian and
other NGOs.
Increased threat of litigation might also affect the way companies
look at human rights. Cape Plc is being sued in the UK on
allegations of having exposed its workers to asbestos in South
Africa. UNOCAL, EXXON Mobil and Coca Cola are all facing law suits
for complicity - let me underline complicity, not commission - in
human rights violations in Myanmar, Indonesia and Colombia
respectively.
Increasingly, there's also a bottom line issue. The dividing line
between investors, shareholders, consumers and the general public
is getting blurred. For instance, pension funds are large investors
and shareholders in companies, and people today want to know where
their pensions are being invested.
The threat of reputation damage, of legal action and of investor
and consumer boycotts have clearly been a spur for voluntary codes,
such as the Global Reporting Initiative, the Kimberly Process and
the voluntary principles on the recruitment of private security
forces by extractive industries. AI has been involved in all these
initiatives.
Voluntary initiatives are important - if companies agree that this
is the correct way of proceeding they are more likely to comply.
But self-regulation has its limits. Take the UN Global Compact to
which 700 companies have signed up. But a number of NGOs have
strongly criticized the Global Compact because they say companies
just use it to promote themselves as "good corporate citizens"
without actually having to live up to their commitments, because
the Compact entails no verification. AI, along with some other
human rights NGOs, is part of the Compact because we feel that it
brings to the table a diverse group of companies from around the
world. But we recognize that there is a risk that companies can
abuse the Global Compact, and undermine the integrity of the UN.
That's why we lobbied for the Compact to name participating
companies (so NGOs can bring pressure to bear on them) and to adopt
a procedure for expelling companies that breach the Global Compact
principles. On both of these there has been progress. But this is
not enough and we are pressing that the Global Compact should
support some mechanism of monitoring, for instance by linking up
with the Global Reporting Initiative, and should support
initiatives for stronger corporate accountability on human rights
principles.
So, while voluntary initiatives can be useful, they have very clear
limits. Most importantly, our experience over the past decade tells
us that progress on corporate responsibility for human rights has
been slow. One survey last year showed that only about 40 companies
had explicitly incorporated human rights in their corporate policy.
Several studies have shown that at the Board level interest in
human rights and social issues is low. In the present economic
climate some companies and commentators are already talking about
corporate social responsibility and human rights as threats and
unnecessary costs.
Too many companies still argue that action on human rights is
political and they cannot interfere in politics (although they are
quite happy to lobby on political issues such as corporate tax
reduction!). Too many companies still claim that human rights do
not apply to them, because governments, not companies sign
treaties. Even as the role and influence of companies has been
increasing in our everyday lives, a concomitant system for ensuring
their accountability has been missing, making companies,
particularly MNCs, a special breed. They command authority but lack
responsibility; they control vast resources but do not have
sovereignty. They operate in a grey zone at the international level
where rules are unclear and control is difficult. Arguably, they
can do what they want and get away with it; or they can choose not
to do what they ought to do because they have no clear legal
obligation.
Grounding commitment in a legal framework
So where does that leave us? Very much at the mercy of the market.
Many companies have expressed an interest in human rights, but few
seem prepared to put this into formal company policy. Where
commitment is wide, as in the case of the Global Compact,
verification measures are absent. Some companies have adopted
voluntary codes and verification out of self-interest but that is
unlikely to win everyone over - and certainly not soon.
We cannot entrust human rights issues to the market place. This is
why Amnesty International decided a year ago to take a two pronged
approach: we will continue to pursue voluntary approaches - codes,
commitments and public pressure - but we will also campaign for
legal accountability mechanisms. If the commitments are to be
meaningful, there must be some system of enforcing
accountability.
( As David explained: Obviously the best way to hold companies
legally responsible is under national law, but in an era of global
economic integration depending simply on national laws is not
enough. The quality of the laws vary from country to country. In
any case, multinationals operate across borders. We need an
international legal framework that reflects ethical standards of
global relevance. And we don't need to invent those ethical
standards - they exist in universal human rights.
(As David Petrasek, Amnesty's Director for Policy, explained
yesterday at the Public Eye, international law would not supplant
national laws but would buttress national efforts, would act as a
benchmark and as a stop-gap where failures at the national level
left companies off the hook.)
Amnesty International's 40-year experience of working on human
rights issues has repeatedly demonstrated the importance of law. We
use many different strategies to persuade or shame governments to
respect and protect rights. In many situations we ask governments
voluntarily to support particular policies that we believe will
advance respect for human rights. But all our work on governments
is grounded in the fact that there is a framework of international
law which creates specific obligations.
Voluntary initiatives in relation to companies would be similarly
strengthened if grounded in law. I believe it would be in the
interest of companies, as much as activists, to embrace this notion
- because it would level the playing field.
Also, leaving the debate in the realm of voluntary commitments
has, in practice, too often let governments off the hook.
Obviously, it is governments who sign the treaties, they are
obliged to protect human rights - and obliged to ensure that
private actors, including companies, do not abuse them. Dialogues
on human rights and the private sector that leave out the role of
law altogether play into the hands of governments who are failing
to live up to these obligations.
Conclusion
Is CSR all PR? I suppose my short answer is if we don't want CSR to
be PR then we must not only ask companies to commit voluntarily to
human rights principles, but - given the unreliability of the
market and the uncertainties of self-interest, we must insist on
enforceable legal accountability.
I don't underestimate the challenge for one moment - building
agreement on legal accountability will not be easy, particularly in
this difficult period of economic and political uncertainty. But
human rights are not a luxury for good times - they must be
respected and upheld at all times under all circumstances, by all
actors, state and non-state. The key to our success will lie in the
ability to forge an effective alliance. AI is keen to work with you
to pursue our common goals - because only by working together I
believe we can move ahead. Thank you.
Amnesty International 23 January 2003 Ai Index: IOR 50/003/2003