HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH

Business: Rights at Risk in the Global Economy

Companies Harm Human Rights Worldwide

(New York, February 19, 2008) – People in countries across the world are regularly harmed when businesses fail to respect basic human rights, according to a new report by Human Rights Watch and the Center for Human Rights and Global Justice (CHRGJ) at New York University School of Law.

The clear evidence of widespread abuse and government inaction detailed in the report shows that global standards are needed to ensure that corporate conduct respects internationally recognized human rights.  
 
“Many companies mistakenly assume that human rights aren’t their problem and don’t think they will ever be implicated in serious abuses,” said Lisa Misol, senior researcher on business and human rights at Human Rights Watch and the report’s primary author. “But the risks are greater than they think. Ensuring respect for fundamental rights is everyone’s business.”  
 
The 53-page report, “On the Margins of Profit: Rights at Risk in the Global Economy,” was jointly prepared by Human Rights Watch and the Center for Human Rights and Global Justice. It illustrates how everyday business decisions have significant implications for the human rights of workers, local communities, suppliers, and consumers.  
 
Drawing on more than a decade of research and reporting by Human Rights Watch, the report presents dozens of examples that detail the ways in which a wide variety of industries have an impact upon the whole spectrum of human rights around the globe.  
 
Among its main findings, the report finds that: This report builds a factual foundation to support calls for the creation of a widely applicable, overarching set of standards for all businesses, regardless of where and how they operate.  
 
There is no common, widely agreed benchmark for business conduct that provides clear rules to prevent business-related human rights abuses and provide adequate remedies and reparation when they occur. Instead, existing corporate social responsibility initiatives offer a patchwork of many different standards that address select human rights, select companies or industries, or select countries or situations.  
 
“The human cost of making a profit can be profound,” said Professor Smita Narula, faculty director of the Center for Human Rights and Global Justice. “Governments must ensure meaningful redress for victims and should develop global rules to make sure companies respect human rights, no matter where they operate.”  
 
Human Rights Watch and the CHRGJ called on governments to work together to develop clear standards governing business conduct and to ensure national authorities adequately regulate companies and hold responsible those who commit abuses. This should result in a UN declaration or other international instrument agreed by governments that would define global standards for business conduct as well as clarify the role of governments and provide access to justice for those affected by misconduct.  
 
Companies should take proactive steps to avoid committing abuses. Investors, financiers and consumers should insist that the companies they support adopt strong human rights policies and practices and put in place monitoring to ensure compliance, said Human Rights Watch and the CHRGJ.



Related Material

On the Margins of Profit: Rights at Risk in the Global Economy
Report, February 19, 2008

The Center for Human Rights and Global Justice at New York University School of Law
Web Site

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