OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE
FOR RESPONSIBLE
BUSINESS CONDUCT
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE
FOR RESPONSIBLE
BUSINESS CONDUCT
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCTOECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
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OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
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OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
The objective of the OECD Due Diligence Guidance for Responsible Business Conduct (Guidance)
is to provide practical support to enterprises on the implementation of the OECD Guidelines
for Multinational Enterprises by providing plain language explanations of its due diligence
recommendations and associated provisions. Implementing these recommendations helps
enterprises avoid and address adverse impacts related to workers, human rights, the environment,
bribery, consumers and corporate governance that may be associated with their operations, supply
chains and other business relationships. The Annex to the Guidance includes additional explanations,
tips and illustrative examples of due diligence.
This Guidance also seeks to promote a common understanding among governments and
stakeholders on due diligence for responsible business conduct. The UN Guiding Principles on
Business and Human Rights as well as the ILO Tripartite Declaration of Principles Concerning
Multinational Enterprises and Social Policy also contain due diligence recommendations, and this
Guidance can help enterprises implement them.
The Guidance responds to the G7 Leaders’ Declaration adopted on 7-8 June 2015 in Schloss
Elmau, which recognised the importance of establishing a common understanding on due
diligence, in particular for small and medium-sized enterprises, and encouraged enterprises
active or headquartered in their countries to implement due diligence in their supply chains. In
their Declaration adopted on 8 July 2017 in Hamburg, G20 Leaders committed to fostering the
implementation of labour, social and environmental standards and human rights in line with
internationally recognised frameworks in order to achieve sustainable and inclusive supply chains,
and underlined the responsibility of businesses to exercise due diligence in this regard. 
The development of this Guidance was overseen by the OECD Working Party on Responsible
Business Conduct (WPRBC) and involved a multi-stakeholder process with OECD and non-OECD
countries and representatives from business, trade unions and civil society. A rst draft was
submitted to the WPRBC and institutional stakeholders of the OECD for comment in May 2016.
A public consultation on a revised draft of this Guidance was held in February 2017. A multi-
stakeholder advisory group was formed in June 2017 to support the WPRBC in integrating
stakeholder comments and completing the Guidance. United Nations Human Rights collaborated
extensively in this process.
This Guidance was approved by the OECD Working Party on Responsible Business Conduct on
6 March 2018 and by the OECD Investment Committee on 3 April 2018. An OECD Recommendation
on the Guidance was adopted by Council at Ministerial level on 30 May 2018.
The OECD has also developed guidance to help enterprises carry out due diligence for responsible
business conduct in specic sectors and supply chains, namely: minerals; agriculture; garment
and footwear; extractives; and nance.
FOREWORD
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
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OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
ACRONYMS AND ABBREVIATIONS
EIA Environmental impact assessment
EPZ Export processing zone
ESIA Environmental and social impact assessments
HRIA Human rights impact assessment
KYC Know your counterparty
MNE Multinational enterprise
NHRI National human rights institution
NCP National Contact Point for the OECD Guidelines
for Multinational Enterprises
OLGM Operational-level grievance mechanism
RBC Responsible business conduct
RBC issues Human rights, including workers and industrial
relations, environment, bribery and corruption,
disclosure, and consumer interests
SME Small and medium-sized enterprise
WPRBC OECD Working Party on Responsible
Business Conduct
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCTOECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
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OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
INTRODUCTION 9
I.
OVERVIEW OF DUE DILIGENCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT 14
Adverse impacts and risk
15
Why carry out due diligence?
16
Characteristics of due diligence – the essentials
16
II. DUE DILIGENCE PROCESS 20
1.
Embed responsible business conduct into policies and management systems
22
2.
Identify and assess actual and potential adverse impacts associated with the
enterprise’s operations, products or services
25
3.
Cease, prevent and mitigate adverse impacts
29
4.
Track implementation and results
32
5.
Communicate how impacts are addressed
33
6. Provide for or cooperate in remediation when appropriate 34
ANNEX: Questions related to the overview of due diligence
for responsible business conduct
37
Q1. What are some examples of adverse impacts on matters covered by
the OECD Guidelines for MNEs?
38
Q2. How can an enterprise integrate gender issues into its due diligence? 41
Q3. How can an enterprise make decisions with respect to prioritisation? 42
Q4. At what stages of the due diligence process is prioritisation relevant? 45
Q5. How does prioritisation dier for human rights risks than for other
adverse impacts?
45
Q6. How can resource constraints be addressed? 46
Q7. How can due diligence be appropriate to an enterprise’s circumstances? 46
Q8. Who are the enterprise’s stakeholders? 48
Q9. What is “meaningful stakeholder engagement”? 49
Q10. When is stakeholder engagement important in the context of due diligence? 50
Q11. How can an enterprise engage with potentially vulnerable stakeholders? 51
Q12. How can enterprises collaborate in carrying out due diligence? 51
Q13. Can collaboration pose risks under competition law? 53
TABLE OF CONTENTS
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OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Questions related to the due diligence process 55
A.1. Embed responsible business conduct into policies
and management systems
Q14. What goes into RBC policies? 56
Q15. What expertise can be drawn upon in developing RBC policies? 56
Q16. Which teams or business units will be relevant to consider when
developing and aligning objectives with the enterprise’s RBC policies?
57
Q17. What are the distinctions in the role of the board and management in
ensuring RBC is embedded?
59
Q18. How can RBC expectations be built into business relationships? 60
A.. Identify and assess actual and potential adverse impacts associated
with the enterprise’s operations, products or services
Q19. What is meant by scoping and how broad should an enterprise’s
scoping exercise be?
61
Q20. What is meant by sector, product, geographic, and enterprise-level risks?
62
Q21. What are example sources of information for desk-based research?
63
Q22. How might information decits be addressed?
65
Q23. How can an enterprise assess risks of adverse impacts in its own activities?
65
Q24. How can an enterprise prioritise which of its own operations or business
relationships to assess rst?
66
Q25. How can enterprises carry out assessments of business relationships
prioritised during its scoping?
66
Q26. What can an assessment of business relationships cover and who should
conduct these assessments?
67
Q27. When to assess business relationships?
68
Q28. How can enterprises assess business relationships with whom they do not
have contractual relationships?
68
Q29. What is meant by adverse impacts that are “caused”, “contributed to” by
the enterprise or are “directly linked” to its operations, products or services
by a business relationship?
70
Q30. Why does the way an enterprise is involved with adverse impacts matter?
72
Q31. How can an enterprise prioritise its actions when seeking to prevent and
mitigate adverse impacts across its activities and business relationships?
73
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
A.3. Cease, prevent and mitigate adverse impacts
Q32. What is the dierence between preventing adverse impacts and
mitigating adverse impacts?
74
Q33. How should an enterprise prevent and mitigate actual or potential impacts
it may cause or contribute to?
75
Q34. How can an enterprise seek to prevent and mitigate actual or potential
impacts directly linked to its operations, products or services by a business
relationship?
77
Q35. How can an enterprise modify its operations or activities to prevent and
mitigate adverse impacts linked to its business relationships?
77
Q36. How can an enterprise use its leverage? 78
Q37. How can a lack of leverage be addressed? 79
Q38. How can an enterprise support a business relationship in the prevention or
mitigation of adverse impacts?
80
Q39. How can an enterprise approach disengagement? 80
A.4. Track implementation and results
Q40. How can an enterprise seek to prevent and mitigate adverse impacts
linked to business relationships with whom it does not have a
contractual relationship?
81
Q41. What information is tracked under due diligence? 82
Q42. How can an enterprise track implementation and results? 82
Q43. Who is involved in tracking implementation and results within an
enterprise?
83
Q44. How can an enterprise respond to the results of its tracking? 84
Q45. How to prioritise tracking activities? 84
A.5. Communicate how impacts are addressed
Q46. What are appropriate forms of communicating publicly and to impacted
stakeholders?
85
Q47. When information is commercially sensitive, how can relevant information
still be communicated?
86
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
A.6. Provide for or cooperate in remediation when appropriate
Q48. What is the relationship of remediation to due diligence? 88
Q49. What is meant by “remediation” and “remedy”? 88
Q50. How can an enterprise identify appropriate forms of remedy? 88
Q51. What are “legitimate remediation mechanisms”? 89
Q52. What does it mean to “cooperate with legitimate remediation
mechanisms”?
90
Q53. In which circumstances are various processes to enable remediation
appropriate?
90
Q54. What is the dierence between an early warning system and
a process to enable remediation?
91
RECOMMENDATION OF THE COUNCIL ON THE OECD DUE DILIGENCE
GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
92
REFERENCES 95
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INTRODUCTION
TABLE 1. SCOPE OF THE OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RBC
Enterprises l All multinational enterprises (MNEs), regardless of their ownership
structure, in all sectors and of all sizes operating or based in countries
adhering to the OECD Guidelines for MNEs, including multinational, small
and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs).
l All the entities within the MNE group – parent and local entities,
including subsidiaries.
l Multinational and domestic enterprises are subject to the same
expectations in respect of their conduct wherever the OECD Guidelines for
MNEs are relevant to both.
BASIS
This Due Diligence Guidance for Responsible Business Conduct (Guidance) is based on the OECD
Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises (OECD Guidelines for MNEs). The OECD Guidelines for
MNEs are non-binding recommendations addressed to multinational enterprises by govern-
ments on responsible business conduct (RBC). They acknowledge and encourage the positive
contributions that business can make to economic, environmental and social progress, and also
recognise that business activities can result in adverse impacts related to workers, human rights,
the environment, bribery, consumers and corporate governance. The OECD Guidelines for MNEs
therefore recommend that businesses carry out risk-based due diligence to avoid and address
such adverse impacts associated with their operations, their supply chains and other business
relationships.
PURPOSE
This Guidance helps businesses (enterprises) to understand and implement due diligence for RBC
as foreseen in the OECD Guidelines for MNEs (due diligence). This Guidance also seeks to promote
a common understanding amongst governments and stakeholders on due diligence for RBC.
The OECD Guidelines for MNEs provide enterprises with the exibility to adapt the characteris-
tics, specic measures and processes of due diligence to their own circumstances. Enterprises
should use this Guidance as a framework for developing and strengthening their own tailored
due diligence systems and processes, and then seek out additional resources for further in-depth
learning as needed.
The OECD Guidelines for MNEs have a unique promotion and grievance mechanism – the
National Contact Points (NCPs). This Guidance is a useful resource for NCPs in understanding and
promoting the OECD Guidelines for MNEs.
usee Box 8 for further information on NCPs
SCOPE
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OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
INTRODUCTION
TABLE 1. SCOPE OF THE OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RBC
Topics covered
in due diligence
(RBC issues)*
l Human Rights (OECD, 2011, Chapter IV)
l Employment and Industrial Relations (OECD, 2011, Chapter V )
l Environment (OECD, 2011, Chapter VI)
l Combating Bribery, Bribe Solicitation and Extortion (OECD, 2011,
Chapter VII)
l Consumer Interests (OECD, 2011, Chapter VIII)
l Disclosure (OECD, 2011, Chapter III)
Business
relationships
covered by
due diligence
All types of business relationships of the enterprise – suppliers, franchisees,
licensees, joint ventures, investors, clients, contractors, customers,
consultants, nancial, legal and other advisers, and any other non-State or
State entities linked to its business operations, products or services.
* Three chapters of the OEC D Guidelines for MNEs are not covered by the Guidance: Science and Technology;
Competition; and Taxation.
TARGET AUDIENCES
The primary audience of the Guidance is practitioners tasked with implementing due diligence
within an enterprise. Given the wide range of topics covered by the OECD Guidelines for MNEs
and the cross-functional nature of implementing due diligence across an enterprise’s varied
operations and business relationships, there are likely to be a number of dierent business units,
functional areas and individuals responsible for implementing due diligence. This Guidance
may also be useful for other parties, such as sector-wide and multi-stakeholder initiatives that
facilitate collaboration on due diligence activities, and for workers, trade unions and workers’
representatives
1
and civil society organisations.
STRUCTURE
The Guidance begins with a brief summary of each chapter of the OECD Guidelines for MNEs. It then
provides an overview of due diligence, including some key concepts and characteristics, so readers
can easily understand the due diligence approach recommended in the OECD Guidelines for MNEs.
The main body of this Guidance describes the due diligence process and supporting measures in a
step-by-step fashion, although in practice the process of due diligence is ongoing, iterative and not
necessarily sequential, as several steps may be carried out simultaneously with results feeding into
each other. “Practical actions” are included in each step to further illustrate ways to implement, or
1. This Guidance uses the terms workers’ representatives, trade unions and representative organisations of their own
choosing, as understood by international labour standards: ILO Conventions No. 87 (Freedom of Association),
No. 98 (Right to Organise and Collective Bargaining) and No. 135 (Workers’ Representatives).
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
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INTRODUCTION
adapt as needed, the supporting measures and due diligence process. The practical actions are not meant
to represent an exhaustive “tick box” list for due diligence. Not every practical action will be appropriate
for every situation. Likewise, enterprises may nd additional actions or implementation measures useful in
some situations.
Additional explanations, tips and illustrative examples of due diligence are referenced and crosslinked
throughout this Guidance. These are presented in a “question and answer” format and associated with
specic sections of the Guidance.
LINKS TO OTHER PROCESSES AND INSTRUMENTS
OECD sector guidance on responsible business conduct
The OECD has developed sector-specic due diligence guidance for the minerals, agriculture and
garment and footwear supply chains, and good practice papers for the extractives and nancial sectors
(see OECD, 2016a; OECD, 2016b; OECD, 2016c; OECD, 2017a; and OECD, 2017b). These were developed in
close co-operation with governments, business, trade unions and civil society. Approaches articulated
under the sector guidance align with the approach of this Guidance, but provide more detailed recom-
mendations tailored to specic contexts or sectors. This Guidance is not intended to replace or otherwise
modify, but can supplement, existing sector-specic or thematic OECD guidance on RBC. Where ques-
tions arise, enterprises should use the guidance that is most specic and relevant to their operations,
supply chain or sector.
Other OECD instruments
The OECD Guidelines for MNEs are referenced in a range of other OECD instruments that reinforce
the interlinkages between RBC and these other areas, including: the G20/OECD Principles of Corporate
Governance; the Guidelines on Corporate Governance of State-Owned Enterprises; the Common
Approaches for Ocially Supported Export Credits and Environmental and Social Due Diligence; the
Policy Framework for Investment; the Recommendation of the Council on Public Procurement; and the
Recommendation of the Council for Further Combating Bribery of Foreign Public Ocials in Interna-
tional Business Transactions (see OECD, 2015a; OECD, 2015b; OECD, 2016d; OECD, 2015c; OECD, 2015d;
and OECD, 2009).
Other multilateral processes and instruments
In relation to human rights issues, including the human rights of workers, this Guidance seeks
to align with the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights, the ILO Declaration on
Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work, the ILO Conventions and Recommendations referenced
within the OECD Guidelines for MNEs, and the ILO Tripartite Declaration of Principles concerning
Multinational Enterprises and Social Policy (see UN, 2011; ILO, 1998; and ILO, 2017).
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
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OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
VI. Environment
The environment
chapter provides a set
of recommendations for
MNEs to raise their environmental
performance and help maximise
their contribution to environmental
protection through improved
internal management and better
planning. It broadly reects the
principles and objectives of the
Rio Declaration on Environment
and Development and Agenda 21.
IV. Human Rights
Enterprises can have
an impact on virtually
the entire spectrum of
internationally recognised human
rights. As such, it is important that
they meet their responsibilities.
This new chapter of the Guidelines
draws on and is aligned with the
UN “Protect, Respect and Remedy
Framework and the Guiding Princi-
ples on Business and Human Rights
that operationalise that framework.
V. Employment and
Industrial Relations
The ILO is the
competent body
to set and deal with
international labour standards
and to promote fundamental
rights at work as recognised
in the ILO 1998 Declaration on
Fundamental Principles and Rights
at Work. This chapter focuses on
the role the Guidelines have in
promoting observance among
MNEs of the international labour
standards developed by the ILO.
CHAPTERS OF THE OECD GUIDELINES
I. Concepts and Principles
The rst chapter of the
Guidelines sets out
concepts and principles
that put into context all of the
recommendations in the subse-
quent chapters. These concepts
and principles (e.g. obeying
domestic law is the rst obligation
of enterprises) are the backbone
of the Guidelines and underline
the fundamental ideas behind
the Guidelines.
II. General Policies
This chapter is the rst
to contain specic
recommendations to
enterprises in the form of general
policies that set the tone and
establish a framework of common
principles for the subsequent
chapters. It includes important
provisions such as implementing
due diligence, addressing adverse
impacts, engaging stakeholders,
and others.
III. Disclosure
Clear and complete
information on the
enterprise is important
to a variety of users. This chapter
calls on enterprises to be transpar-
ent in their operations and respon-
sive to increasingly sophisticated
public demands for information.
PEGGY KING COINTE PAS / DESIGN
6, QUAI DES CÉLESTINS 75004 PARIS / STU[email protected] / +33 (0) 6 76 48 81 36 / WWW.PFFK.NET ICONS / OECD GUIDEINES FOR MULTINATIONAL ENTERPRISES / R5 MARCH 2018
GENERAL
POLICIES
ENVIRONMENT
CONSUMER
INTERESTS
SCIENCE AND
TECHNOLOGY
COMPETITION
1 2 3 4 5 6
CONCEPTS
AND PRINCIPLES
DISCLOSURE
EMPLOYMENT
AND INDUSTRIAL
RELATIONS
HUMAN RIGHTS
COMBATING
BRIBERY, BRIBE
SOLICITATIONS
AND EXTORTION
TAXATION
TAXATION
DISCLOSURE
DISCLOSURE
DISCLOSURE
DISCLOSURE DISCLOSURE
HUMAN RIGHTS
ENVIRONMENT
ENVIRONMENT
ENVIRONMENT
ENVIRONMENT
PEGGY KING COINTE PAS / DESIGN
6, QUAI DES CÉLESTINS 75004 PARIS / STU[email protected] / +33 (0) 6 76 48 81 36 / WWW.PFFK.NET ICONS / OECD GUIDEINES FOR MULTINATIONAL ENTERPRISES / R5 MARCH 2018
GENERAL
POLICIES
ENVIRONMENT
CONSUMER
INTERESTS
SCIENCE AND
TECHNOLOGY
COMPETITION
1 2 3 4 5 6
CONCEPTS
AND PRINCIPLES
DISCLOSURE
EMPLOYMENT
AND INDUSTRIAL
RELATIONS
HUMAN RIGHTS
COMBATING
BRIBERY, BRIBE
SOLICITATIONS
AND EXTORTION
TAXATION
DISCLOSURE
DISCLOSURE
DISCLOSURE
DISCLOSURE DISCLOSURE
HUMAN RIGHTS
ENVIRONMENT
ENVIRONMENT
ENVIRONMENT
ENVIRONMENT
PEGGY KING COINTE PAS / DESIGN
6, QUAI DES CÉLESTINS 75004 PARIS / STU[email protected] / +33 (0) 6 76 48 81 36 / WWW.PFFK.NET ICONS / OECD GUIDEINES FOR MULTINATIONAL ENTERPRISES / R5 MARCH 2018
GENERAL
POLICIES
ENVIRONMENT
CONSUMER
INTERESTS
SCIENCE AND
TECHNOLOGY
COMPETITION
1 2 3 4 5 6
CONCEPTS
AND PRINCIPLES
DISCLOSURE
EMPLOYMENT
AND INDUSTRIAL
RELATIONS
HUMAN RIGHTS
COMBATING
BRIBERY, BRIBE
SOLICITATIONS
AND EXTORTION
TAXATION
TAXATION
DISCLOSURE
DISCLOSURE
DISCLOSURE
DISCLOSURE DISCLOSURE
HUMAN RIGHTS
ENVIRONMENT
ENVIRONMENT
ENVIRONMENT
ENVIRONMENT
PEGGY KING COINTE PAS / DESIGN
6, QUAI DES CÉLESTINS 75004 PARIS / STU[email protected] / +33 (0) 6 76 48 81 36 / WWW.PFFK.NET ICONS / OECD GUIDEINES FOR MULTINATIONAL ENTERPRISES / R5 MARCH 2018
GENERAL
POLICIES
ENVIRONMENT
CONSUMER
INTERESTS
SCIENCE AND
TECHNOLOGY
COMPETITION
1 2 3 4 5 6
CONCEPTS
AND PRINCIPLES
DISCLOSURE
EMPLOYMENT
AND INDUSTRIAL
RELATIONS
HUMAN RIGHTS
COMBATING
BRIBERY, BRIBE
SOLICITATIONS
AND EXTORTION
TAXATION
TAXATION
DISCLOSURE
DISCLOSURE
DISCLOSURE
DISCLOSURE DISCLOSURE
HUMAN RIGHTS
ENVIRONMENT
ENVIRONMENT
ENVIRONMENT
ENVIRONMENT
PEGGY KING COINTE PAS / DESIGN
6, QUAI DES CÉLESTINS 75004 PARIS / STU[email protected] / +33 (0) 6 76 48 81 36 / WWW.PFFK.NET ICONS / OECD GUIDEINES FOR MULTINATIONAL ENTERPRISES / R5 MARCH 2018
GENERAL
POLICIES
ENVIRONMENT
CONSUMER
INTERESTS
SCIENCE AND
TECHNOLOGY
COMPETITION
1 2 3 4 5 6
CONCEPTS
AND PRINCIPLES
DISCLOSURE
EMPLOYMENT
AND INDUSTRIAL
RELATIONS
HUMAN RIGHTS
COMBATING
BRIBERY, BRIBE
SOLICITATIONS
AND EXTORTION
TAXATION
TAXATION
DISCLOSURE
DISCLOSURE
DISCLOSURE
DISCLOSURE DISCLOSURE
HUMAN RIGHTS
ENVIRONMENT
ENVIRONMENT
ENVIRONMENT
ENVIRONMENT
PEGGY KING COINTE PAS / DESIGN
6, QUAI DES CÉLESTINS 75004 PARIS / STU[email protected] / +33 (0) 6 76 48 81 36 / WWW.PFFK.NET ICONS / OECD GUIDEINES FOR MULTINATIONAL ENTERPRISES / R5 MARCH 2018
GENERAL
POLICIES
ENVIRONMENT
CONSUMER
INTERESTS
SCIENCE AND
TECHNOLOGY
COMPETITION
1 2 3 4 5 6
CONCEPTS
AND PRINCIPLES
DISCLOSURE
EMPLOYMENT
AND INDUSTRIAL
RELATIONS
HUMAN RIGHTS
COMBATING
BRIBERY, BRIBE
SOLICITATIONS
AND EXTORTION
TAXATION
TAXATION
DISCLOSURE
DISCLOSURE
DISCLOSURE
DISCLOSURE DISCLOSURE
HUMAN RIGHTS
ENVIRONMENT
ENVIRONMENT
ENVIRONMENT
ENVIRONMENT
INTRODUCTION
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
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OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
VIII. Consumer Interests
The Guidelines call on
enterprises to apply fair
business, marketing,
and advertising practices and to
ensure the quality and reliability of
the products that they provide.
This chapter draws on the work of
the OECD Committee on Consumer
Policy and the Committee on
Financial Markets, and of other
international organisations,
including the International
Chamber of Commerce, the
International Organisation for
Standardization and the UN.
IX. Science and Technology
This chapter recognises
that MNEs are the main
conduit of technology
transfer across borders. It aims to
promote technology transfer to
host countries and contribution to
their innovative capacities.
X. Competition
This chapter focuses
on the importance of
MNEs carrying out their
activities in a manner consistent
with all applicable competition
laws and regulations, taking into
account the competition laws of all
jurisdictions in which their activities
may have anti-competitive eects.
Enterprises need to refrain from
anti-competitive agreements,
which undermine the ecient
operation of both domestic and
international markets.
XI. Taxation
The Guidelines are
the rst international
corporate responsibil-
ity instrument to cover taxation,
contributing to and drawing upon
a signicant body of work on
taxation, most notably the OECD
Model Tax Convention and the UN
Model Double Taxation Convention
between Developed and Develop-
ing Countries. This important
chapter covers fundamental
taxation recommendations.
FOR MULTINATIONAL ENTERPRISES
PEGGY KING COINTE PAS / DESIGN
6, QUAI DES CÉLESTINS 75004 PARIS / STU[email protected] / +33 (0) 6 76 48 81 36 / WWW.PFFK.NET ICONS / OECD GUIDEINES FOR MULTINATIONAL ENTERPRISES / R5 MARCH 2018
GENERAL
POLICIES
ENVIRONMENT
CONSUMER
INTERESTS
SCIENCE AND
TECHNOLOGY
COMPETITION
1 2 3 4 5 6
CONCEPTS
AND PRINCIPLES
DISCLOSURE
EMPLOYMENT
AND INDUSTRIAL
RELATIONS
HUMAN RIGHTS
COMBATING
BRIBERY, BRIBE
SOLICITATIONS
AND EXTORTION
TAXATION
TAXATION
DISCLOSURE
DISCLOSURE
DISCLOSURE
DISCLOSURE DISCLOSURE
HUMAN RIGHTS
ENVIRONMENT
ENVIRONMENT
ENVIRONMENT
ENVIRONMENT
PEGGY KING COINTE PAS / DESIGN
6, QUAI DES CÉLESTINS 75004 PARIS / STU[email protected] / +33 (0) 6 76 48 81 36 / WWW.PFFK.NET ICONS / OECD GUIDEINES FOR MULTINATIONAL ENTERPRISES / R5 MARCH 2018
GENERAL
POLICIES
ENVIRONMENT
CONSUMER
INTERESTS
SCIENCE AND
TECHNOLOGY
COMPETITION
1 2 3 4 5 6
CONCEPTS
AND PRINCIPLES
DISCLOSURE
EMPLOYMENT
AND INDUSTRIAL
RELATIONS
HUMAN RIGHTS
COMBATING
BRIBERY, BRIBE
SOLICITATIONS
AND EXTORTION
TAXATION
TAXATION
DISCLOSURE
DISCLOSURE
DISCLOSURE
DISCLOSURE DISCLOSURE
HUMAN RIGHTS
ENVIRONMENT
ENVIRONMENT
ENVIRONMENT
ENVIRONMENT
PEGGY KING COINTE PAS / DESIGN
6, QUAI DES CÉLESTINS 75004 PARIS / STU[email protected] / +33 (0) 6 76 48 81 36 / WWW.PFFK.NET ICONS / OECD GUIDEINES FOR MULTINATIONAL ENTERPRISES / R5 MARCH 2018
GENERAL
POLICIES
ENVIRONMENT
CONSUMER
INTERESTS
SCIENCE AND
TECHNOLOGY
COMPETITION
1 2 3 4 5 6
CONCEPTS
AND PRINCIPLES
DISCLOSURE
EMPLOYMENT
AND INDUSTRIAL
RELATIONS
HUMAN RIGHTS
COMBATING
BRIBERY, BRIBE
SOLICITATIONS
AND EXTORTION
TAXATION
TAXATION
DISCLOSURE
DISCLOSURE
DISCLOSURE
DISCLOSURE DISCLOSURE
HUMAN RIGHTS
ENVIRONMENT
ENVIRONMENT
ENVIRONMENT
ENVIRONMENT
PEGGY KING COINTE PAS / DESIGN
6, QUAI DES CÉLESTINS 75004 PARIS / STU[email protected] / +33 (0) 6 76 48 81 36 / WWW.PFFK.NET ICONS / OECD GUIDEINES FOR MULTINATIONAL ENTERPRISES / R5 MARCH 2018
GENERAL
POLICIES
ENVIRONMENT
CONSUMER
INTERESTS
SCIENCE AND
TECHNOLOGY
COMPETITION
1 2 3 4 5 6
CONCEPTS
AND PRINCIPLES
DISCLOSURE
EMPLOYMENT
AND INDUSTRIAL
RELATIONS
HUMAN RIGHTS
COMBATING
BRIBERY, BRIBE
SOLICITATIONS
AND EXTORTION
TAXATION
TAXATION
DISCLOSURE
DISCLOSURE
DISCLOSURE
DISCLOSURE DISCLOSURE
HUMAN RIGHTS
ENVIRONMENT
ENVIRONMENT
ENVIRONMENT
ENVIRONMENT
VII. Combating Bribery, Bribe
Solicitations and Extortion
Bribery and corruption
are damaging to demo-
cratic institutions and
the governance of corporations.
Enterprises have an important role
to play in combating these prac-
tices. The OECD is leading global
eorts to level the playing eld for
international businesses by ghting
to eliminate bribery. The recom-
mendations in the Guidelines are
based on the extensive work the
OECD has already done in this eld.
PEGGY KING COINTE PAS / DESIGN
6, QUAI DES CÉLESTINS 75004 PARIS / STU[email protected] / +33 (0) 6 76 48 81 36 / WWW.PFFK.NET ICONS / OECD GUIDEINES FOR MULTINATIONAL ENTERPRISES / R5 MARCH 2018
GENERAL
POLICIES
ENVIRONMENT
CONSUMER
INTERESTS
SCIENCE AND
TECHNOLOGY
COMPETITION
1 2 3 4 5 6
CONCEPTS
AND PRINCIPLES
DISCLOSURE
EMPLOYMENT
AND INDUSTRIAL
RELATIONS
HUMAN RIGHTS
COMBATING
BRIBERY, BRIBE
SOLICITATIONS
AND EXTORTION
TAXATION
TAXATION
DISCLOSURE
DISCLOSURE
DISCLOSURE
DISCLOSURE DISCLOSURE
HUMAN RIGHTS
ENVIRONMENT
ENVIRONMENT
ENVIRONMENT
ENVIRONMENT
INTRODUCTION
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
OVERVIEW OF DUE DILIGENCE
FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
I.
14
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCTOECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
15
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
OVERVIEW OF DUE DILIGENCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
The OECD Guidelines for MNEs acknowledge and encourage the positive contributions that busi-
ness can make to economic, environmental and social progress, but also recognise that business
activities may result in adverse impacts related to corporate governance, workers, human rights,
the environment, bribery, and consumers. Due diligence is the process enterprises should carry
out to identify, prevent, mitigate and account for how they address these actual and potential
adverse impacts in their own operations, their supply chain and other business relationships, as
recommended in the OECD Guidelines for MNEs. Eective due diligence should be supported by
eorts to embed RBC into policies and management systems, and aims to enable enterprises to
remediate adverse impacts that they cause or to which they contribute.
usee Figure 1
ADVERSE IMPACTS AND RISK
Due diligence addresses actual adverse impacts or potential adverse impacts (risks) related to
the following topics covered in the OECD Guidelines for MNEs: human rights, including workers
and industrial relations, environment, bribery and corruption, disclosure, and consumer interests
(RBC issues). The OECD Guidelines for MNEs chapters provide detailed provisions on the type of
conduct recommended for each RBC issue. The likelihood of adverse impacts increases in situ-
ations where an enterprise’s behaviour or the circumstances associated with their supply chains
or business relationships are not consistent with the recommendations in the OECD Guidelines
for MNEs. A risk of adverse impacts may exist when there is the potential for behaviour that is
inconsistent with the recommendations in the OECD Guidelines for MNEs because it involves
impacts that may occur in the future.
usee Annex Q1
BOX 1. UNDERSTANDING RISK UNDER THE OECD GUIDELINES FOR MNES
For many enterprises, the term “risk” means primarily risks to the enterprise – nan-
cial risk, market risk, operational risk, reputational risk, etc. Enterprises are concerned
with their position in the market vis-à-vis their competitors, their image and long-term
existence, so when they look at risks, it is typically risks to themselves. The Guidelines
however refer to the likelihood of adverse impacts on people, the environment and
society that enterprises cause, contribute to, or to which they are directly linked. In other
words, it is an outward-facing approach to risk.
Enterprises can identify risks on RBC issues by looking for divergences between what
is recommended in the OECD Guidelines for MNEs on the one hand, and the circum-
stances associated with their operations, supply chains or business relationships on
the other.
usee Annex Q1
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
16
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
OVERVIEW OF DUE DILIGENCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
WHY CARRY OUT DUE DILIGENCE?
Some business operations, products or services are inherently risky because they are likely to
cause, contribute to, or be directly linked to adverse impacts on RBC issues. In other contexts,
business operations may not be inherently risky, but circumstances (e.g. rule of law issues, lack
of enforcement of standards, behaviour of business relationships) may result in risks of adverse
impacts. Due diligence should help enterprises anticipate and prevent or mitigate these impacts.
In some limited cases, due diligence may help them decide whether or not to go ahead with or
discontinue operations or business relationships as a last resort, because the risk of an adverse
impact is too high or because mitigation eorts have not been successful.
Eectively preventing and mitigating adverse impacts may in turn also help an enterprise
maximise positive contributions to society, improve stakeholder relationships and protect its
reputation. Due diligence can help enterprises create more value, including by: identifying oppor-
tunities to reduce costs; improving understanding of markets and strategic sources of supply;
strengthening management of company-specic business and operational risks; decreasing
the probability of incidents relating to matters covered by the OECD Guidelines for MNEs; and
decreasing exposure to systemic risks. An enterprise can also carry out due diligence to help it
meet legal requirements pertaining to specic RBC issues, such as local labour, environmental,
corporate governance, criminal or anti-bribery laws.
CHARACTERISTICS OF DUE DILIGENCE  THE ESSENTIALS
l Due diligence is preventative.
The purpose of due diligence is rst and foremost to avoid causing or contributing to
adverse impacts on people, the environment and society, and to seek to prevent adverse
impacts directly linked to operations, products or services through business relationships.
When involvement in adverse impacts cannot be avoided, due diligence should enable enter-
prises to mitigate them, prevent their recurrence and, where relevant, remediate them.
l Due diligence involves multiple processes and objectives.
The concept of due diligence under the OECD Guidelines for MNEs involves a bundle of
interrelated processes to identify adverse impacts, prevent and mitigate them, track imple-
mentation and results and communicate on how adverse impacts are addressed with respect
to the enterprises' own operations, their supply chains and other business relationships.
Due diligence should be an integral part of enterprise decision-making and risk manage-
ment. In this respect it can build o (although it is broader than) traditional transactional
or “know your counterparty” (KYC) due diligence processes. Embedding RBC into policies
and management systems helps enterprises prevent adverse impacts on RBC issues and
also supports eective due diligence by clarifying an enterprise’s strategy, building sta
capacity, ensuring availability of resources, and communicating a clear tone from the top.
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
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OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
OVERVIEW OF DUE DILIGENCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
l Due diligence is commensurate with risk (risk-based).
Due diligence is risk-based. The measures that an enterprise takes to conduct due diligence
should be commensurate to the severity and likelihood of the adverse impact. When the
likelihood and severity of an adverse impact is high, then due diligence should be more
extensive. Due diligence should also be adapted to the nature of the adverse impact on
RBC issues, such as human rights, the environment and corruption. This involves tailoring
approaches for specic risks and taking into account how these risks aect dierent groups,
such as applying a gender perspective to due diligence.
usee Annex Q2
l Due diligence can involve prioritisation (risk-based).
Where it is not feasible to address all identied impacts at once, an enterprise should
prioritise the order in which it takes action based on the severity and likelihood of the
adverse impact. Once the most signicant impacts are identied and dealt with, the enter-
prise should move on to address less signicant impacts. Where an enterprise is causing or
contributing to an adverse impact on RBC issues, it should always stop the activities that are
causing or contributing to the impact and provide for or cooperate in their remediation. The
process of prioritisation is also ongoing, and in some instances new or emerging adverse
impacts may arise and be prioritised before moving on to less signicant impacts. In the
case of prioritising risks to human rights, the severity of a potential adverse impact, such as
where a delayed response would make the impact irremediable, is the predominant factor
in prioritising responses.
usee Annex Q3-5
l Due diligence is dynamic.
The due diligence process is not static, but ongoing, responsive and changing. It includes
feedback loops so that the enterprise can learn from what worked and what did not work.
Enterprises should aim to progressively improve their systems and processes to avoid and
address adverse impacts. Through the due diligence process, an enterprise should be
able to adequately respond to potential changes in its risk prole as circumstances evolve
(e.g. changes in a country’s regulatory framework, emerging risks in the sector, the develop-
ment of new products or new business relationships).
l Due diligence does not shift responsibilities.
Each enterprise in a business relationship has its own responsibility to identify and address
adverse impacts. The due diligence recommendations of the OECD Guidelines for MNEs are
not intended to shift responsibilities from governments to enterprises, or from enterprises
causing or contributing to adverse impacts to the enterprises that are directly linked to
adverse impacts through their business relationships. Instead, they recommend that each
enterprise addresses its own responsibility with respect to adverse impacts. In cases where
impacts are directly linked to an enterprise’s operations, products or services, the enterprise
should seek, to the extent possible, to use its leverage to eect change, individually or in
collaboration with others.
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
18
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
OVERVIEW OF DUE DILIGENCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
l Due diligence concerns internationally recognised standards of RBC.
The OECD Guidelines for MNEs provide principles and standards of RBC consistent with appli-
cable laws and internationally-recognised standards. They state that obeying domestic laws in
the jurisdictions in which the enterprise operates and/or where they are domiciled is the rst
obligation of enterprises. Due diligence can help enterprises observe their legal obligations
on matters pertaining to the OECD Guidelines for MNEs. In countries where domestic laws
and regulations conict with the principles and standards of the OECD Guidelines for MNEs,
due diligence can also help enterprises honour the OECD Guidelines for MNEs to the fullest
extent which does not place them in violation of domestic law. Domestic law may also in some
instances require an enterprise to take action on a specic RBC issue, (e.g. laws pertaining to
specic RBC issues such as foreign bribery, modern slavery or minerals from conict-aected
and high-risk areas).
l Due diligence is appropriate to an enterprise’s circumstances.
The nature and extent of due diligence can be aected by factors such as the size of the
enterprise, the context of its operations, its business model, its position in supply chains, and
the nature of its products or services. Large enterprises with expansive operations and many
products or services may need more formalised and extensive systems than smaller enter-
prises with a limited range of products or services to eectively identify and manage risks.
usee Annex Q6-7 and Table 4
l Due diligence can be adapted to deal with the limitations of working with
business relationships.
Enterprises may face practical and legal limitations to how they can inuence or aect business
relationships to cease, prevent or mitigate adverse impacts on RBC issues or remedy them.
Enterprises, in particular SMEs, may not have the market power to inuence their business
relationships by themselves. Enterprises can seek to overcome these challenges to inuence
business relationships through contractual arrangements, pre-qualication requirements,
voting trusts, license or franchise agreements, and also through collaborative eorts to pool
leverage in industry associations or cross-sectoral initiatives.
l Due diligence is informed by engagement with stakeholders.
Stakeholders are persons or groups who have interests that could be aected by an enterprise’s
activities.
2
Stakeholder engagement is characterised by two-way communication. It involves
the timely sharing of the relevant information needed for stakeholders to make informed
decisions in a format that they can understand and access. To be meaningful, engagement
involves the good faith of all parties. Meaningful engagement with relevant stakeholders is
important throughout the due diligence process. In particular, when the enterprise may
cause or contribute to, or has caused or contributed to an adverse impact, engagement
2. Examples of stakeholders include workers, workers’ representatives, trade unions (including Global Unions)
community members, civil society organisations, investors and professional industry and trade associations.
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
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OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
OVERVIEW OF DUE DILIGENCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
3. Annex Q8 provides an explanation of the terms relevant stakeholders, impacted or potentially impacted
stakeholders and rightsholders. Annex Q8-11 provides more information about stakeholder engagement.
4. Competitive concerns should be interpreted in light of applicable competition law.
with impacted or potentially impacted stakeholders and rightsholders will be important.
For example, depending on the nature of the adverse impact being addressed, this could
include participating in and sharing results of on-site assessments, developing risk mitigation
measures, ongoing monitoring and designing of grievance mechanisms.
3
l Due diligence involves ongoing communication.
Communicating information on due diligence processes, ndings and plans is part of the due
diligence process itself. It enables the enterprise to build trust in its actions and decision-making,
and demonstrate good faith. An enterprise should account for how it identies and addresses
actual or potential adverse impacts and should communicate accordingly. Information should
be accessible to its intended audiences (e.g. stakeholders, investors, consumers, etc.) and be
sucient to demonstrate the adequacy of an enterprise’s response to impacts. Communication
should be carried out with due regard for commercial condentiality and other competitive
4
or security concerns. Various strategies may be useful in communicating to the extent possible
while respecting condentiality concerns.
usee Annex Q47
BOX 2. COLLABORATION IN CARRYING OUT DUE DILIGENCE
Enterprises can collaborate at an industry or multi-industry level as well as with rele-
vant stakeholders throughout the due diligence process, although they always remain
responsible for ensuring that their due diligence is carried out eectively. For example,
collaboration may be pursued in order to pool knowledge, increase leverage and scale-
up eective measures. Cost sharing and savings is often a benet to sector collaboration
and can be particularly useful for SMEs.
usee Annex Q12
While in many cases, enterprises can collaborate on due diligence without breaching
competition law, enterprises, and the collaborative initiatives in which they are involved,
are encouraged to take proactive steps to understand competition law issues in their
jurisdiction and avoid activities which can be seen as breach of competition law.
u
see Annex Q13
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
20
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
II.
THE DUE DILIGENCE PROCESS
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCTOECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
21
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
THE DUE DILIGENCE PROCESS
Taking into account that due diligence should be commensurate with risk and appropriate to
a specic enterprise’s circumstances and context, the following section outlines measures:
(1) to embed RBC into the enterprise’s policies and management systems; to undertake due dili-
gence by (2) identifying actual or potential adverse impacts on RBC issues, (3) ceasing, preventing
or mitigating them, (4) tracking implementation and results, (5) communicating how impacts are
addressed; and (6) to enable remediation when appropriate.
usee Figure 1
The practical actions provided are not meant to represent an exhaustive “tick box” list for due
diligence. Not every practical action will be appropriate for every situation. Likewise, additional
practical actions or implementation measures not described in this Guidance may be useful in
some situations.
FIGURE 1. DUE DILIGENCE PROCESS & SUPPORTING MEASURES
COMMUNICATE
HOW IMPACTS
ARE ADDRESSED
IDENTIFY & ASSESS
ADVERSE IMPACTS
IN OPERATIONS, SUPPLY CHAINS
& BUSINESS RELATIONSHIPS
TRACK
IMPLEMENTATION
AND RESULTS
CEASE, PREVENT OR MITIGATE
ADVERSE IMPACTS
1
6
EMBED
RESPONSIBLE
BUSINESS CONDUCT
INTO POLICIES &
MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS
PROVIDE FOR OR
COOPERATE
IN REMEDIATION
WHEN APPROPRIATE
2
3
5
4
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCTOECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
22
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
1
EMBED RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
INTO POLICIES AND MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS
1.1 Devise, adopt and disseminate a combination of policies on RBC issues that articulate the
enterprise’s commitments to the principles and standards contained in the OECD Guide-
lines for MNEs and its plans for implementing due diligence, which will be relevant for the
enterprise’s own operations, its supply chain and other business relationships.
usee Annex Q14-15
i
PRACTICAL ACTIONS
a. Review and update existing policies on RBC issues (e.g. labour, human rights,
environment, disclosure, consumer protection, governance, anti-bribery and
corruption) to align with the principles and standards of the OECD Guidelines
for MNEs.
b. Develop specic policies on the enterprise’s most signicant risks, building on
ndings from its assessment of risk, in order to provide guidance on the enterprise’s
specic approach to addressing those risks. Consider making the enterprise’s due
diligence plans part of these policies.
c. Make the enterprise’s policies on RBC issues publicly available, e.g. on the enterprise’s
website, at the enterprise’s premises, and when relevant, in the local languages.
d. Communicate the policies to the enterprise’s own relevant employees and other
workers, e.g. during sta orientation or training and periodically as needed to
maintain awareness.
e. Update the enterprise’s policies as risks in the enterprise’s operations, supply chain
and other business relationships emerge and evolve.
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
23
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
EMBED RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT INTO POLICIES AND MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
1.2 Seek to embed the enterprise’s policies on RBC issues into the enterprise’s oversight
bodies. Embed the enterprise’s policies on RBC issues into management systems
so that they are implemented as part of the regular business processes, taking into
account the potential independence, autonomy and legal structure of these bodies
that may be foreseen in domestic law and regulations.
i
PRACTICAL ACTIONS
a. Assign oversight and responsibility for due diligence to relevant senior management
and assign board level responsibilities for RBC more broadly.
usee Annex Q16
b. Assign responsibility for implementing aspects of the policies across relevant
departments with particular attention to those workers whose actions and decisions
are most likely to increase or decrease risks.
usee Annex Q16
c. Develop or adapt existing information and record-keeping systems to collect
information on due diligence processes, related decision-making and responses.
d. Establish channels of communication, or utilise existing channels of communication,
between relevant senior management and implementing departments for sharing
and documenting information on risk and decision-making.
e. Encourage alignment across teams and business units on relevant aspects of
the enterprise’s RBC policies. This could be done for example by creating cross-
functional groups or committees to share information and decision-making about
risks, and including business units that can impact observance of the RBC policies
in decision-making.
usee Annex Q16
f. Provide training to workers to help them understand and implement relevant
aspects of RBC policies and provide adequate resources commensurate with the
extent of due diligence needed.
g. Develop incentives for workers and business units that are compatible with the
enterprise’s RBC policies.
h. Develop, draw from or adapt existing complaint procedures for workers to raise
issues or complaints related to RBC issues (e.g. labour practices, corruption,
corporate governance).
i. Develop processes to respond to or, where appropriate, provide remedies in
situations where the RBC policy is not observed (e.g. through additional fact-nding,
capacity building or disciplinary actions/sanctions).
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
24
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
EMBED RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT INTO POLICIES AND MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
1.3 Incorporate RBC expectations and policies into engagement with suppliers and
other business relationships.
usee Annex Q18
i
PRACTICAL ACTIONS
a. Communicate key aspects of the RBC policies to suppliers and other relevant
business relationships.
b. Include conditions and expectations on RBC issues in supplier or business
relationship contracts or other forms of written agreements.
c. Develop and implement pre-qualication processes on due diligence for suppliers
and other business relationships, where feasible, adapting such processes to the
specic risk and context in order to focus on RBC issues that have been identied as
relevant for the business relationships and their activities or area(s) of operation.
d. Provide adequate resources and training to suppliers and other business
relationships for them to understand and apply the relevant RBC policies and
implement due diligence.
e. Seek to understand and address barriers arising from the enterprise’s way of doing
business that may impede the ability of suppliers and other business relationships
to implement RBC polices, such as the enterprise’s purchasing practices and
commercial incentives.
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCTOECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
25
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
IDENTIFY AND ASSESS ACTUAL AND POTENTIAL
ADVERSE IMPACTS ASSOCIATED WITH THE ENTERPRISE’S
OPERATIONS, PRODUCTS OR SERVICES
2
2.1 Carry out a broad scoping exercise to identify all areas of the business, across its
operations and relationships, including in its supply chains, where RBC risks are most
likely to be present and most signicant. Relevant elements include, among others,
information about sectoral, geographic, product and enterprise risk factors, including
known risks the enterprise has faced or is likely to face. The scoping exercise should
enable the enterprise to carry out an initial prioritisation of the most signicant risk
areas for further assessment. For enterprises with less diverse operations, in particular
smaller enterprises, a scoping exercise may not be necessary before moving to the
stage of identifying and prioritising specic impacts.
usee Annex Q19-22
i
PRACTICAL ACTIONS
a. Create an initial, high-level picture of the enterprise’s areas of operation and types of
business relationships to understand what information will be relevant to gather.
b. Gather information to understand high-level risks of adverse impacts related to the
sector (e.g. products and their supply chains, services and other activities), geography
(e.g. governance and rule-of-law, conict, pervasive human rights or environmental
adverse impacts) or enterprise-specic risk factors (e.g. known instances of
corruption, misconduct, implementation of standards for RBC).
usee Annex Q20
Sources might include reports from governments, international organisations, civil
society organisations, workers’ representatives and trade unions, national human
rights institutions (NHRIs), media or other experts.
usee Annex Q21-22
c. Where gaps in information exist, consult with relevant stakeholders and experts.
d. Consider information raised through early warning systems (e.g. hotlines) and
grievance mechanisms.
e. Identify the most signicant RBC risk areas and prioritise these as the starting point
for a deeper assessment of potential and actual impacts.
f. Review the ndings of the scoping exercise on a regular basis.
g. Update the scoping exercise with new information whenever the enterprise makes
signicant changes, such as operating in or sourcing from a new country; developing
a new product or service line that varies signicantly from existing lines; changing
the inputs of a product or service; restructuring, or engaging in new forms of
business relationships (e.g. mergers, acquisitions, new clients and markets).
26
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
IDENTIFY AND ASSESS ACTUAL AND POTENTIAL ADVERSE IMPACTS ASSOCIATED
WITH THE ENTERPRISE’S OPERATIONS, PRODUCTS OR SERVICES
2.2 Starting with the signicant areas of risk identied above, carry out iterative and
increasingly in-depth assessments of prioritised operations, suppliers and other busi-
ness relationships in order to identify and assess specic actual and potential adverse
RBC impacts.
usee Annex Q23-28
i
PRACTICAL ACTIONS
a. Map the enterprise’s operations, suppliers and other business relationships, including
associated supply chains, relevant to the prioritised risk.
b. Catalogue the specic RBC standards and issues applicable to the risk being
assessed, including relevant provisions from the OECD Guidelines for MNEs, as well
as domestic laws and relevant international and industry-specic frameworks on
RBC issues.
c. Obtain, when appropriate and feasible, relevant information about business
relationships beyond contractual relationships (e.g. sub-suppliers beyond “tier 1).
Establish processes individually or collaboratively to assess the risk prole of more
remote tiers of the relationship, including by reviewing existing assessments, and
engaging with mid-stream actors and “control points” in the supply chain to assess
their due diligence practices against this Guidance.
d. Assess the nature and extent of actual and potential impacts linked to prioritised
operations, suppliers or other business relationships (i.e. which RBC issue is impacted
and in what ways, the scope of the impact, etc.). Where available, use information
from the enterprise’s own, or third parties, environmental impact assessments
(EIA), environmental and social impacts assessments (ESIA), human rights impact
assessments (HRIA), legal reviews, compliance management systems regarding
corruption, nancial audits (for disclosure), occupational, health and safety
inspections; and any other relevant assessments of business relationships carried
out by the enterprise or by industry and multi-stakeholder initiatives, including
environmental, social and labour audits, corruption assessments and KYC processes.
e. Identify activities that may not be carried out in an appropriate legal and institutional
framework sucient to protect the rights of all persons and enterprises involved.
f. Consider the RBC risksprior to a proposed business activity (e.g. an acquisition,
restructuring, new market entry, new product or service development) projecting
how the proposed activity and associated business relationships could have adverse
impacts on specic RBC issues.
g. Reassess impacts at regular intervals as needed: prior to major decisions or changes
in the activity (e.g. market entry, product launch, policy change, or wider changes
to the business); in response to or in anticipation of changes in the operating
environment (e.g. rising social tensions); and periodically throughout the life of an
activity or relationship.
PRACTICAL
ACTIONS
27
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IDENTIFY AND ASSESS ACTUAL AND POTENTIAL ADVERSE IMPACTS ASSOCIATED
WITH THE ENTERPRISE’S OPERATIONS, PRODUCTS OR SERVICES
h. For human rights impacts, consult and engage impacted and potentially
impacted rightsholders, including workers, workers’ representatives and
trade unions, to gather information on adverse impacts and risks, taking into
account potential barriers to eective stakeholder engagement. Where directly
consulting with rightsholders is not possible, consider reasonable alternatives
such as consulting credible, independent expert resources, including human
rights defenders, trade unions and civil society groups. Consult potentially
impacted rightsholders both prior to and during projects or activities that may
aect them (e.g. through site-level assessments).
usee Annex Q8-11 and Q25
i. In assessing impacts related to human rights, pay special attention to potential
adverse impacts on individuals from groups or populations that may have a
heightened risk of vulnerability or marginalisation, and to dierent risks that
may be faced by women and men.
j. For enterprises with multiple entities within an enterprise group, support
local entities to carry out their own assessments.
2.3 Assess the enterprise’s involvement with the actual or potential adverse
impacts identied in order to determine the appropriate responses (see 3.1 and
3.3). Specically, assess whether the enterprise: caused (or would cause) the
adverse impact; or contributed (or would contribute) to the adverse impact; or
whether the adverse impact is (or would be) directly linked to its operations,
products or services by a business relationship.
usee Annex Q29-30
i
PRACTICAL ACTIONS
a. Consult with business relationships, other relevant enterprises and other
relevant stakeholders.
b. Consult with impacted stakeholders and rightsholders or their legitimate
representatives.
c. Seek relevant internal or external expertise as needed.
d. If impacted stakeholders or rightsholders disagree with the enterprise’s
assessment of its involvement with any actual or potential adverse impact,
cooperate in good faith with legitimate mechanisms designed to help resolve
the disagreements and provide remediation.
usee Annex Q51-52
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28
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
IDENTIFY AND ASSESS ACTUAL AND POTENTIAL ADVERSE IMPACTS ASSOCIATED
WITH THE ENTERPRISE’S OPERATIONS, PRODUCTS OR SERVICES
2.4 Drawing from the information obtained on actual and potential adverse impacts,
where necessary, prioritise the most signicant RBC risks and impacts for action,
based on severity and likelihood. Prioritisation will be relevant where it is not
possible to address all potential and actual adverse impacts immediately. Once
the most signicant impacts are identied and dealt with, the enterprise should
move on to address less signicant impacts.
usee Annex Q3-5 and Q31
i
PRACTICAL ACTIONS
a. Identify which potential or actual impacts may be addressed immediately, at least to
some degree (e.g. update contract terms with suppliers, amend audit protocols to
focus on risks that may have been previously missed during audits).
b. Prioritise for action any activities that are causing or contributing to adverse impacts
on RBC issues, based on the enterprise’s assessment of their involvement with
adverse impacts as per 2.3.
c. For impacts involving business relationships, assess the extent to which business
relationships have appropriate policies and processes in place to identify, prevent
and mitigate relevant RBC risks themselves.
d. Where it is not possible to address all real and potential adverse impacts directly
linked to the enterprise’s operations, products or services by business relationships
(or to address them to the full extent desirable), evaluate the likelihood and severity
of the identied impacts or risks to understand which issues should be prioritised
for action.
e. Consult with business relationships, other relevant enterprises and impacted or
potentially impacted stakeholders and rightsholders on prioritisation decisions.
f. Seek relevant internal or external expertise as needed.
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29
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
CEASE, PREVENT AND MITIGATE ADVERSE IMPACTS
3
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
3.1 Stop activities that are causing or contributing to adverse impacts on RBC issues, based
on the enterprise’s assessment of its involvement with adverse impacts as per 2.3.
Develop and implement plans that are t-for-purpose to prevent and mitigate
potential (future) adverse impacts.
usee Annex Q32-33
i
PRACTICAL ACTIONS
a. Assign relevant senior responsibility for ensuring that activities that cause or
contribute to adverse impacts cease, and for preventing activities that may cause or
contribute to adverse impacts in the future.
b In the case of complex actions or actions that may be dicult to stop due to
operational, contractual or legal issues, create a roadmap for how to stop the
activities causing or contributing to adverse impacts, involving in-house legal
counsel and impacted or potentially impacted stakeholders and rightsholders.
c. Update the enterprise’s policies to provide guidance on how to avoid and address
the adverse impacts in the future and ensure their implementation.
d. Provide training that is t-for-purpose for the enterprise’s relevant workers
and management.
e. Draw from the ndings of the risk assessment to update and strengthen
management systems to better track information and ag risks before adverse
impacts occur.
usee Section 1.2
f. Consult and engage with impacted and potentially impacted stakeholders and
rightsholders and their representatives to devise appropriate actions and implement
the plan.
usee Annex Q 8-Q11
g. In the case of collective or cumulative impacts (i.e. where the enterprise is only
one of several entities contributing to the adverse impact occurring) and, where
appropriate, seek to engage with other involved entities to cease the impacts and
prevent them from recurring or to prevent risks from materialising, e.g. through
industry initiatives and engagement with governments.
usee Annex Box 6
h. In cases where the enterprise is contributing to adverse impacts or risks that are
caused by another entity, it should take necessary steps to cease or prevent its
contribution as described above, also building and using leverage to mitigate any
remaining impacts to the greatest extent possible.
usee Section 3.2 (c) – (e)
and Annex Q34
30
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CEASE, PREVENT AND MITIGATE ADVERSE IMPACTS
3.2 Based on the enterprise’s prioritisation (see Section 2.4), develop and implement plans
to seek to prevent or mitigate actual or potential adverse impacts on RBC issues which
are directly linked to the enterprise’s operations, products or services by business rela
-
tionships. Appropriate responses to risks associated with business relationships may at
times include: continuation of the relationship throughout the course of risk mitigation
eorts; temporary suspension of the relationship while pursuing ongoing risk mitigation;
or, disengagement with the business relationship either after failed attempts at mitiga
-
tion, or where the enterprise deems mitigation not feasible, or because of the severity
of the adverse impact. A decision to disengage should take into account potential social
and economic adverse impacts. These plans should detail the actions the enterprise will
take, as well as its expectations of its suppliers, buyers and other business relationships.
usee Annex Q34-40
i
PRACTICAL ACTIONS
a. Assign responsibility for developing, implementing and monitoring these plans.
b. Support or collaborate with the relevant business relationship(s) in developing
t-for-purpose plans for them to prevent or mitigate adverse impacts identied
within reasonable and clearly dened timelines, using qualitative and quantitative
indicators for dening and measuring improvement (sometimes referred to as
corrective action plans”).
usee Annex Q38
c. Use leverage, to the extent possible, to prompt the business relationship(s) to
prevent or mitigate adverse impacts or risks.
usee Annex Q36 and Q40
d. If the enterprise does not have sucient leverage, consider ways to build additional
leverage with the business relationship, including for example through outreach
from senior management and through commercial incentives. To the extent
possible, cooperate with other actors to build and exert collective leverage, for
example through collaborative approaches in industry associations, or through
engagement with governments.
usee Annex Q37
e. To prevent potential (future) adverse impacts and address actual impacts, seek to
build leverage into new and existing business relationships, e.g. through policies or
codes of conduct, contracts, written agreements or use of market power.
usee Section II, 1.3 and Annex Q36
f. For human rights impacts, encourage entities causing or contributing to adverse
impacts to consult and engage with impacted or potentially impacted rightsholders
or their representatives in developing and implementing corrective action plans.
usee Annex Q8-Q11
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CEASE, PREVENT AND MITIGATE ADVERSE IMPACTS
g. Support relevant suppliers and other business relationships in the prevention or
mitigation of adverse impacts or risks, e.g. through training, upgrading of facilities, or
strengthening of their management systems, striving for continuous improvement.
usee Annex Q38
h. Consider disengagement from the supplier or other business relationship as a
last resort after failed attempts at preventing or mitigating severe impacts; when
adverse impacts are irremediable; where there is no reasonable prospect of change;
or when severe adverse impacts or risks are identied and the entity causing the
impact does not take immediate action to prevent or mitigate them. Any plans for
disengagement should also take into account howcrucialthesupplier or business
relationship is to the enterprise, the legal implications of remaining in or ending the
relationship, how disengagement might change impacts on the ground, as well
as credible information about the potential social and economic adverse impacts
related to the decision to disengage.
usee Annex Q39
i. If an enterprise decides to remain in a relationship, it should be prepared to account
for its ongoing risk mitigation eorts and be aware of the reputational, nancial or
legal risks of the continuing connection.
J. Encourage relevant authorities in the country where the impact is occurring to
act, e.g. through inspections, enforcement and application of existing laws and
regulations.
usee Box 6
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32
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
TRACK IMPLEMENTATION AND RESULTS
4
4.1 Track the implementation and eectiveness of the enterprise’s due diligence activi-
ties, i.e. its measures to identify, prevent, mitigate and, where appropriate, support
remediation of impacts, including with business relationships. In turn, use the lessons
learned from tracking to improve these processes in the future.
usee Annex Q41-Q45
i
PRACTICAL ACTIONS
a. Monitor and track implementation and eectiveness of the enterprise’s own
internal commitments, activities and goals on due diligence, e.g. by carrying out
periodic internal or third party reviews or audits of the outcomes achieved and
communicating results at relevant levels within the enterprise.
b. Carry out periodic assessments of business relationships, to verify that risk mitigation
measures are being pursued or to validate that adverse impacts have actually been
prevented or mitigated.
c. For human rights impacts the enterprise has, or may, cause or contribute to, seek
to consult and engage impacted or potentially impacted rightsholders, including
workers, workers’ representatives and trade unions.
usee Annex Q8-Q11
d. Seek to encourage periodic reviews of relevant multi-stakeholder and industry
initiatives of which the enterprise is a member, including their alignment with this
Guidance, and their value to the enterprise in helping it identify, prevent or mitigate
adverse impacts linked to its business, taking into account the independence of
these initiatives.
usee Annex Q12
e. Identify adverse impacts or risks that may have been overlooked in past due
diligence processes and include these in the future.
f. Include feedback of lessons learned into the enterprise’s due diligence in order to
improve the process and outcomes in the future.
usee Annex Q44
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33
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
5
COMMUNICATE HOW IMPACTS ARE ADDRESSED
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
5.1 Communicate externally relevant information on due diligence policies, processes,
activities conducted to identify and address actual or potential adverse impacts,
including the ndings and outcomes of those activities.
usee Annex Q46-Q47
i
PRACTICAL ACTIONS
a. Publicly report relevant information on due diligence processes, with due regard for
commercial condentiality and other competitive or security concerns, e.g. through
the enterprise’s annual, sustainability or corporate responsibility reports or other
appropriate forms of disclosure. Include RBC policies, information on measures taken
to embed RBC into policies and management systems, the enterprise’s identied
areas of signicant risks, the signicant adverse impacts or risks identied, prioritised
and assessed, as well as the prioritisation criteria, the actions taken to prevent or
mitigate those risks, including where possible estimated timelines and benchmarks
for improvement and their outcomes, measures to track implementation and results
and the enterprise’s provision of or co-operation in any remediation.
b. Publish the above information in a way that is easily accessible and appropriate,
e.g. on the enterprise’s website, at the enterprise’s premises and in local languages.
c. For human rights impacts that the enterprise causes or contributes to, be prepared
to communicate with impacted or potentially impacted rightsholders in a timely,
culturally sensitive and accessible manner, the information above that is specically
relevant to them, in particular when relevant concerns are raised by them or on their
behalf.
usee Section II, 2.4 and Section II, 2.12
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6
PROVIDE FOR OR COOPERATE IN REMEDIATION
WHEN APPROPRIATE
34
6.1 When the enterprise identies that it has caused or contributed to actual adverse
impacts, address such impacts by providing for or cooperating in their remediation.
usee Section 2.3 and Annex Q48-Q50
i
PRACTICAL ACTIONS
a. Seek to restore the aected person or persons to the situation they would be in had
the adverse impact not occurred (where possible) and enable remediation that is
proportionate to the signicance and scale of the adverse impact.
b. Comply with the law and seek out international guidelines on remediation where
available, and where such standards or guidelines are not available, consider a
remedy that would be consistent with that provided in similar cases.
The type of remedy or combination of remedies that is appropriate will depend
on the nature and extent of the adverse impact and may include apologies,
restitution or rehabilitation (e.g., reinstatement of dismissed workers, recognition
of the trade union for the purpose of collective bargaining), nancial or non-nancial
compensation (for example, establishing compensation funds for victims, or for
future outreach and educational programmes), punitive sanctions (for example, the
dismissals of sta responsible for wrongdoing), taking measures to prevent future
adverse impacts.
usee Annex Q50
c. In relation to human rights impacts, consult and engage with impacted
rightsholders and their representatives in the determination of the remedy.
usee Annex Q8-Q11 and Q50
d. Seek to assess the level of satisfaction of those who have raised complaints with the
process provided and its outcome(s).
35
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PROVIDE FOR OR COOPERATE IN REMEDIATION WHEN APPROPRIATE
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
6.2 When appropriate, provide for or cooperate with legitimate remediation mecha-
nisms through which impacted stakeholders and rightsholders can raise complaints
and seek to have them addressed with the enterprise. Referral of an alleged impact
to a legitimate remediation mechanism may be particularly helpful in situations
where there are disagreements on whether the enterprise caused or contributed
to adverse impacts, or on the nature and extent of remediation to be provided.
usee Section II, 2.3 and Annex Q 51-54
i
PRACTICAL ACTIONS
a. Cooperate in good faith with judicial or non-judicial mechanisms. For example if
a specic instance is submitted to an NCP or through initiatives that provide other
types of grievance mechanisms involving the conduct of the enterprise. If the
actual adverse impact caused constitutes a criminal or administrative oense, the
enterprise may be subject to criminal prosecution or administrative sanctions.
b. Establish operational-level grievance mechanisms (OLGM), for example in-house
worker complaint mechanisms or third-party complaint systems. This may involve
setting up a complaints process including: a roadmap for remediation and resolving
complaints; timelines for resolving grievances; processes to respond to complaints
if agreement is not reached or if impacts are particularly severe; determining the
scope of the OLGM’s mandate; consulting with relevant stakeholders on appropriate
forms of OLGMs and ways to resolve complaints that are culturally appropriate and
accessible; stang and resourcing the OLGM; and tracking and monitoring the
performance of the OLGM. For human rights impacts, align OLGMs with core criteria
of legitimacy, accessibility, predictability, equitability, compatibility with the OECD
Guidelines for MNEs, transparency and dialogue-based engagement.
c. Engage with workers’ representatives and trade unions to establish a process
through which they can raise complaints to the enterprise, for example, through
grievance mechanisms set forth in any collective agreements or through Global
Framework Agreements.
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OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
ANNEX
QUESTIONS RELATED TO
THE OVERVIEW OF DUE DILIGENCE
FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
EXAMPLES AND EXPLANATIONS ON DUE DILIGENCE
FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
37
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
These examples and explanations are intended to provide
selective illustrations of recommendations
of the OECD Due Diligence Guidance for Responsible Business Conduct.
They do not introduce any new or additional recommendations
with respect to due diligence approaches.
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38
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
TABLE 2. EXAMPLES OF ADVERSE IMPACTS ON MATTERS COVERED BY
THE OECD GUIDELINES FOR MNEs
TOPIC EXAMPLES OF ADVERSE IMPACTS
1
Disclosure
2
l Failing to disclose material information on the nancial and
operating results of the enterprise; enterprise objectives, major share
ownership and voting rights, remuneration policy for members
of the board and key executives, and information about board
members, related party transactions, foreseeable risk factors, issues
regarding workers and other relevant stakeholders, governance
structures and policies.
l Failing to provide the public and workers with adequate,
measureable and veriable (where applicable) and timely
information on the potential environment health and safety impacts
of the activities of the enterprise.
Human rights
l Forced labour.
3
l Wage discrimination for equal work or work of equal value.
l Gender-based violence or harassment including sexual harassment.
l Failing to identify and appropriately engage with indigenous
peoples where they are present and potentially impacted by the
enterprise’s activities.
l Involvement in reprisals against civil society and human rights
defenders who document, speak out about, or otherwise raise
potential and actual human rights impacts associated with projects.
l Restriction on people’s access to clean water.
Due diligence addresses actual adverse impacts or potential adverse impacts (risks) related to the
following topics covered in the OECD Guidelines for MNEs: human rights, including workers and
industrial relations, environment, bribery and corruption, disclosure, and consumer interests.
usee Section I, Adverse Impacts and Risk
Q1. What are some examples of adverse impacts on matters covered by the
OECD Guidelines for MNEs?
QUESTIONS RELATED TO THE OVERVIEW OF DUE DILIGENCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
39
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
TABLE 2. EXAMPLES OF ADVERSE IMPACTS ON MATTERS COVERED BY
THE OECD GUIDELINES FOR MNEs
Employment and
industrial relations
l Failing to respect the right of workers to establish or join trade
unions or representative organisations of their own choosing and have
trade unions and representative organisations of their own choosing
recognised for the purpose of collective bargaining.
(OECD, 2011, Chapter V, Para. 1.b)
l Failing to engage in constructive negotiations, either individually
or through employers’ associations, with such representatives
with a view to reaching agreements on terms and conditions of
employment. (OECD, 2011, Chapter V, Para. 1.b)
l Child labour, including worst forms of child labour.
(OECD, 2011, Chapter V, Para. 1.c)
l Discrimination against workers with respect to employment or
occupation on such grounds as race, colour, sex, religion, political
opinion, national extraction or social origin, or other status.
(OECD, 2011, Chapter V, Para. 1.e)
l Failing to adapt machinery, equipment, working time, organisation
of work and work processes to the physical and mental capacities of
workers. (OECD, 2011, Chapter V, 1.e; ILO, 1981, No. 155)
l Failing to replace hazardous substances by harmless or less
hazardous substances wherever possible. (ILO, 1988, No.167)
l Payment of wages that do not meet the basic needs of workers and
their families. (OECD, 2011, Chapter V, Para. 4.b)
l Threatening to transfer the whole or part of an operation unit in
order to hinder workers from forming or joining a trade union.
(OECD, 2011, Chapter V, Para. 7)
Environment
l Ecosystem degradation through land degradation, water resource
depletion, and/or destruction of pristine forests and biodiversity.
l Unsafe levels of biological, chemical or physical hazards in products
or services.
l Water pollution (e.g. through discharging waste water without
regard to adequate wastewater infrastructure).
QUESTIONS RELATED TO THE OVERVIEW OF DUE DILIGENCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
40
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
TABLE 2. EXAMPLES OF ADVERSE IMPACTS ON MATTERS COVERED BY
THE OECD GUIDELINES FOR MNEs
Bribery,
Bribe Solicitation
and Extortion
l Bribery of public ocials to win public procurement contracts.
l Bribery of public ocials to obtain favourable tax treatment or other
preferential treatment or access to condential information.
l Bribery of public ocials to obtain customs clearance.
l Bribery of public ocials to obtain authorisations or permits.
l Selling products to government agencies at an elevated price to
provide public ocials with a share of the prot.
l Bribing public ocials to ignore or avoid regulations or controls.
l Providing gifts, meals and entertainment to those with whom the
enterprise does business without adequate controls or records.
l Receiving gifts from business partners or public ocials without
adequate controls or record.
Consumer Interests
l Goods and services do not meet all agreed or legally required
standards for consumer health and safety, including those pertaining
to health warnings and safety information.
(OECD, 2011, Chapter VIII, Para 1).
l Failing to provide accurate, veriable and clear information that is
sucient to enable consumers to make informed decisions, including
information on the prices and, where appropriate, content, safe use,
environmental attributes, maintenance, storage and disposal of goods
and services. (OECD, 2011, Chapter VIII, Para. 2)
l Representations or omissions of information, or any other practices,
that are deceptive, misleading, fraudulent or unfair.
(OECD, 2011, Chapter VIII, Para. 4)
1. This list is illustrative and not exhaustive. Adverse impacts may be caused or contributed to by an enterprise, or be
directly linked through a business relationship.
2. The concept of risk of adverse impacts may be particularly challenging to understand when applied to the
chapter on “Disclosure” in the OECD Guidelines for MNEs, which primarily concerns potential impacts on
corporate governance, nancial markets, investors and workers. For that reason, the OECD Guidelines for MNEs
provide principles and standards against which activities can be benchmarked and tracked.
3. Universal Declaration of Human Rights, Articles 4 and 13; ILO Declaration on Fundamental Principles and Rights
at Work.
QUESTIONS RELATED TO THE OVERVIEW OF DUE DILIGENCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
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Due diligence should also be adapted to the nature of the adverse impact on RBC
issues, such as on human rights, the environment and corruption. This involves tai-
loring approaches for specic risks and taking into account how these risks aect
dierent groups, such as applying a gender perspective to due diligence when
appropriate.
usee Section I, Characteristics of Due Diligence – Due diligence is commensurate
with risk (risk-based)
Q2. How can an enterprise integrate gender issues into its due diligence?
Applying a gender perspective to due diligence means thinking through how real or potential
adverse impacts may dier for or may be specic to women.
5
FOR EXAMPLE, it is important to be aware of gender issues and women’s human
rights in situations where women may be disproportionately impacted:
l In contexts where women face severe discrimination.
l In contexts where the enterprise’s activities signicantly aect the local economy,
environment and access to land and livelihoods.
l In conict and post-conict areas.
l In sectors and global supply chains in which large numbers of women are employed,
such as apparel, electronics, tourism, health and social care, domestic work,
agriculture and fresh cut owers.
Additionally it involves adjusting, as appropriate, the actions that enterprises take to identify, prevent,
mitigate and address those impacts to ensure these are eective and appropriate.
5
FOR EXAMPLE
l Collecting and assessing sex-disaggregated data and understanding whether enterprise
activities impact dierently on men and women.
l Developing, designing and evaluating gender sensitive and gender responsive policies
and plans to mitigate and address real and potential adverse impacts identied.
l Identifying overlapping/ accumulated vulnerabilities (e.g. indigenous, illiterate,
female worker).
l Developing gender sensitive warning systems and protection of whistleblowers.
l Supporting women’s equal and meaningful participation in consultations
and negotiations.
l Assessing whether women benet equitably in compensation payments or other
forms of restitution.
QUESTIONS RELATED TO THE OVERVIEW OF DUE DILIGENCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
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OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
l Consulting women outside the presence of men and facilitating separate spaces for
women to express opinions and provide input on business decisions.
l Identifying gender-specic trends and patterns in actual or potential adverse impacts
that have been overlooked in the due diligence processes.
l Assessing whether grievance mechanisms are gender-sensitive, taking into
consideration the obstacles that may prevent women from accessing them.
Due diligence can involve prioritisation (risk-based) – Where it is not feasible to address all iden-
tied impacts at once, an enterprise should prioritise the order in which it takes action based
on the severity and likelihood of the adverse impact.
usee Section I, Characteristics of Due Diligence
– Due diligence can involve prioritisation (risk-based)
Q3. How can an enterprise make decisions with respect to prioritisation?
As noted in the Guidance, it may not always be possible for enterprises to identify and respond to all
adverse impacts related to their activities and business relationships immediately. In this respect, the
OECD Guidelines for MNEs also clarify that where “enterprises have large numbers of suppliers, they
are encouraged to identify general areas where the risk of adverse impacts is most signicant and,
based on this risk assessment, prioritise suppliers for due diligence”
5
Enterprises are responsible for
addressing any adverse impacts that they have caused or contributed to.
The signicance of an adverse impact is understood as a function of its likelihood and severity.
Severity of impacts will be judged by their scale, scope and irremediable character.
Scale refers to the gravity of the adverse impact.
Scope concerns the reach of the impact, for example the number of individuals
that are or will be aected or the extent of environmental damage.
Irremediable character means any limits on the ability to restore the individuals
or environment aected to a situation equivalent to their situation before the
adverse impact.
Severity is not an absolute concept and it is context specic. For examples of indicators of scale,
scope and irremediable character across adverse impacts covered by the OECD Guidelines
for MNEs (Table 3). These indicators are illustrative and will vary according to an enterprise’s
operating context.
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5. OECD (2011), Commentary on General Policies, Para 16.
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TABLE 3. EXAMPLES OF INDICATORS OF SCALE, SCOPE AND IRREMEDIABLE CHARACTER
ADVERSE
IMPACT
EXAMPLES OF SCALE EXAMPLES OF SCOPE EXAMPLES OF THE
IRREMEDIABLE CHARACTER
Environment l Extent of impact on
human health
l Extent of changes in species
composition
l Water use intensity (% use
of total available resources)
l Degree of waste and
chemical generation
(tons; % of generation)
l Geographic reach of the
impact
l Number of species impacted
l Degree to which rehabilitation
of the natural site is possible
or practicable
l The length of time
remediation would take
Corruption
l Monetary amount of
the bribe
l Loss of life or severe bodily
harm caused by bribery
l Criminal nature of the bribe
l Extent of impact on markets,
people, environment and
society due to decisions
made based on bribery
l Size of the prot gained
from the bribery
l Frequency at which bribes
are paid
l Geographic spread of bribery
l Number and/or level of
ocials, employees or agents
engaged in bribery
l Extent of activities linked
with bribery
l Number of identiable groups
impacted by decisions based
on bribery
l Extent of damage to society
due to loss of public funds
l Extent to which activities
undertaken and enabled
by bribery will lead to
irremediable adverse impacts
Labour
l Extent of impact on workers’
health or safety
l Whether the violation
concerns a fundamental
right at work
l Number of workers/
employees impacted
l Extent to which impacts
are systemic (e.g. to a
particular geography,
industry or sub-sector)
l Extent to which some
groups are disproportionately
aected by the impacts
(e.g. minorities, women, etc.)
l Extent to which the
impact can be rectied
(e.g. through compensation,
reinstatement, etc.)
l Whether the workers
aected can be restored to
the prior enjoyment of the
right in question
l The extent to which
intimidation of workers
for forming or joining a
trade union will eectively
deny workers the right to
representation
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TABLE 3. EXAMPLES OF INDICATORS OF SCALE, SCOPE AND IRREMEDIABLE CHARACTER
ADVERSE
IMPACT
EXAMPLES OF SCALE EXAMPLES OF SCOPE EXAMPLES OF THE
IRREMEDIABLE CHARACTER
Human
Rights
Extent of infringement of
access to basic life necessities
or freedoms (e.g. education,
livelihood, etc.)
l Number of people impacted
l % of identiable groups of
people impacted
l The extent to which the
impact can be rectied
(e.g. through compensation
or restitution)
l Whether the people aected
can be restored to their
exercise of the right in
question
Disclosure
l Extent to which the
inadequate or false disclosure
of information is material
l Extent of impacts on
markets, people, environment,
and society due to decisions
made based on the
inadequate or false disclosure
l Extent to which decisions
were made based on
inadequate or false disclosure
l Number of people
(e.g. shareholders) impacted
l Number of identiable groups
impacted by decisions made
based on false or inadequate
disclosure
Extent to which lack of or
false disclosure will lead to
irreparable nancial losses or
irremediable adverse impacts
Consumer
interests
l Extent of impact on human
health or safety
l Extent of nancial loss
to consumers
l Number of consumers
impacted
l Number of identiable
groups of consumers
impacted
l % of identiable group of
consumers impacted
The extent to which the impact
can be rectied (e.g. through
compensation or restitution)
The OECD Guidelines for MNEs themselves do not attempt to rank the severity of adverse impacts.
It is not necessary for an impact to have more than one of these characteristics (scale, scope and
irremediable character) to be considered ‘severe, although it is often the case that the greater the
scale or the scope of an impact, the less it is ‘remediable’.
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Where the risk of adverse impacts is most signicant will be specic to the enterprise, its sector
and its business relationships. In some instances this may be a judgement call. Therefore enter-
prises may wish to consult with relevant stakeholders on how to prioritise and communicate
their rationale through their RBC policies. Publically communicating the rationale behind how
prioritisation decisions are made and why can be useful for establishing trust in the enterprise’s
due diligence approach. In some cases prioritisation may also be informed by domestic legal
obligations.
5
FOR EXAMPLE, certain domestic laws require enterprises in a certain jurisdiction to
conduct due diligence to avoid and address the risk of human tracking in their supply
chains or of sourcing minerals that nance conict.
Although enterprises should prioritise their due diligence based on signicance of risk, the options
available to them to respond to identied risks will depend on legal and practical limitations, such
as their ability to eect change in the behaviour of their business relationships, and how crucial
that supplier is to the enterprise.
usee Annex Q7 and Q34-Q40
Q4. At what stages of the due diligence process is prioritisation relevant?
Prioritisation will be necessary where it is not feasible for enterprises to identify and respond to
all adverse impacts associated with their activities and business relationships immediately. Prior-
itisation of signicant risks or impacts will be relevant both when enterprises identify impacts,
as well as when they seek to prevent and mitigate impacts. Impacts that are prioritised for pre-
vention and mitigation will also be those that should be tracked to ensure they are addressed.
usee Annex Q24, Q31, Q45 on how prioritisation can be applied to these steps in practice
Q5. How does prioritisation dier for human rights risks than for other
adverse impacts?
Overall the process of prioritisation for human rights impacts will reect recommendations in
Section II, 2.4 of the Guidance. The OECD Guidelines for MNEs state that in the case of human rights,
severity is a greater factor than likelihood in considering prioritisation. Thus where prioritisation is
necessary enterprises should begin with those human rights impacts that would be most severe,
recognising that a delayed response may aect remediability.
5
FOR EXAMPLE, if a potential adverse impact can result in loss of life, it may be
prioritised even if it is less likely (e.g. establishment of measures to prevent damage and
loss life in case of natural disasters at a power facility).
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Due diligence is appropriate to an enterprise’s circumstances – The nature and extent of due
diligence can be aected by factors such as the size of the enterprise, the context of its opera-
tions, its business model, its position in supply chains, and the nature of its products or services
usee Section I, Characteristics of Due Diligence - Due Diligence is appropriate to an enterprise’s circumstances
Q6. How can resource constraints be addressed?
Due diligence involves human and nancial resource implications. While resource constraints
may be a challenge for all enterprises, small enterprises particularly may have fewer personnel
and nancial resources to carry out due diligence. At the same time, they often have greater ex-
ibility in policy-making and implementation and may have fewer impacts or suppliers to manage
as compared to larger enterprises. The size or resource capacity of an enterprise does not change
its responsibility to conduct due diligence commensurate with the risk, but may aect how an
enterprise carries it out. Enterprises with resource constraints may rely more heavily on collabora-
tive approaches in carrying out due diligence and may have to make more careful decisions in
the context of prioritisation. They may also take advantage of existing resources such as model
policies or public information on risks in certain supply chains and seek technical assistance from
industry associations they are members of.
usee Table 4 for more information
Q7. How can due diligence be appropriate to an enterprise’s circumstances?
How an enterprise carries out due diligence can be aected by factors such as the size of the
enterprise, the context of its operations, its business model, positions in supply chains, and the
nature of its products or services.
usee Table 4 for examples
TABLE 4. EXAMPLES OF HOW AN ENTERPRISE’S DUE DILIGENCE MAY BE ADAPTED
TO BE APPROPRIATE TO ITS CIRCUMSTANCES
Factors Examples
Size of the enterprise
l A SME with limited leverage over its suppliers and limited resources
to allocate towards building the capacity of suppliers to meet RBC
requirements, may consider establishing robust prequalication
processes whereby only suppliers that meet high thresholds of RBC
are engaged. In doing so the SME reduces the extent of resources
necessary in identifying, monitoring or preventing impacts once a
supplier has been engaged.
l A large multinational with numerous suppliers and business
relationships across a range of higher-risk contexts, may draw from
in-country oces with allocated and trained personnel responsible
for overseeing due diligence on the ground.
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TABLE 4. EXAMPLES OF HOW AN ENTERPRISE’S DUE DILIGENCE MAY BE ADAPTED
TO BE APPROPRIATE TO ITS CIRCUMSTANCES
Context of the enterprise’s
operations
As part of its stakeholder engagement an enterprise sourcing
from conict-aected or unsafe regions may engage with bilateral
aid agencies (e.g. donor agencies) who have means, access and
expertise over these areas or civil society within the region, whereas
an enterprise operating in safer contexts may engage directly with
impacted or potentially impacted stakeholders and rightsholders.
Business model
of the enterprise
An infrastructure enterprise with long-term investments in developing
economies may nd that it is eective to engage with the government
and help them address systemic issues in the region where it is
operating alongside other risk prevention and mitigation measures,
as a means of preventing adverse impacts linked to its operations
in the long term. Conversely, it may not be appropriate for a bank
nancing a shorter-term project (e.g. upgrading of a facility) in a
developing economy to address systemic issues within the region,
but rather may focus its eorts on carrying out robust human rights
impact assessments of its nancing and tailoring provisions of the
nancing appropriately.
Position of
the enterprise
in the supply chain
A downstream enterprise (e.g. retailer) may carry out assessments
on mid-stream suppliers to assess how they are carrying out due
diligence on their upstream suppliers to identify risks of child labour.
An enterprise operating mid-stream in a supply chain may establish
traceability to upstream business relationships operating in higher-
risk areas to identify risks of child labour. In both cases, child labour
would be prioritised, but the way each enterprise identied the risk is
dierent depending on their position in the supply chain.
Nature of the enterprise’s
products or services
An enterprise that provides an online platform for peer-to-peer
services (such as accommodation) may not carry out on-site
assessments of its individual operators (e.g. those providing lodging)
as an enterprise with more traditional services may do. However, the
enterprise may establish robust grievance mechanisms and stringent
requirements for operators that are monitored to guard against
any breaches to its code of conduct and operating policies so as to
discourage and quickly react to oenders.
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Due diligence is informed by engagement with stakeholders – Stakeholders are per-
sons or groups who have interests that could be aected by an enterprise’s activities.
usee Section I, Characteristics of Due Diligence-Informed by stakeholders
Q8. Who are the enterprise’s stakeholders?
Stakeholders are persons or groups who have interests that are or could be impacted by an en-
terprise’s activities. Not all individuals and groups considered as stakeholders will have interests
that can be aected by a specic activity carried out by an enterprise. It will therefore be impor-
tant for the enterprise to identify the individuals and groups with interests that must be taken
into account with respect to a specic activity (relevant stakeholders). Moreover, due diligence
concerns the interests of stakeholders that have been aected (impacted stakeholders) as well as
those whose interests have not been aected but could be (potentially impacted stakeholders).
Additionally, not all interests are of equal importance and it is not necessary to treat all stakehold-
ers in the same way. Where the interest is individual human rights or collective rights (held by
groups such as indigenous peoples) the stakeholders whose human rights are or may be aected
can be referred to as “rightsholders”.
Stakeholders will dier depending on the enterprise and its activities.
5
FOR EXAMPLE, impacted and potentially impacted stakeholders and rightsholders
may include:
l communities at local, regional or national level
l workers and employees including under informal arrangements within supply chains
and trade unions
l consumers or end-users of products
Additionally, relevant stakeholders that may be important for meaningful engagement
may include:
l NGOs, local civil society organisations, NHRIs
l community-based organisations and local human rights defenders
l industry peers
l host governments (local, regional and national)
l business partners
l investors/shareholders
Many resources exist to help enterprises identify their stakeholders (e.g. OECD, 2015).
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In situations where there are a vast number of impacted or potentially impacted stakeholders or
rightsholders, an enterprise may engage with credible stakeholder representatives, in particular
where engaging with individuals can undermine certain rights or collective interests.
5
FOR EXAMPLE, when deciding to restructure or close a factory, it may be important
to engage with trade unions, rather than individual workers, in order to mitigate
the employment impacts of the decision, as the right of workers to form or join trade
unions and their right to bargain collectively are internationally-recognised
human rights.
Enterprises can prioritise the most severely impacted or potentially impacted stakeholders or rights-
holders for engagement. The degree of impact on stakeholders or rightsholders may inform the
degree of engagement.
Q9. What is “meaningful stakeholder engagement”?
l Stakeholder engagement involves interactive processes of engagement with
relevant stakeholders. Stakeholder engagement can take place through, for example,
meetings, hearings or consultation proceedings. Meaningful stakeholder engagement
is characterised by two-way communication and depends on the good faith of the
participants on both sides.
6
It is also responsive and on-going, and includes in many
cases engaging with relevant stakeholders before decisions have been made.
l Two-way engagement means that the enterprise and stakeholders freely express
opinions, share perspectives and listen to alternative viewpoints to reach a mutual
understanding. It also means that relevant stakeholders have the opportunity to help
design and carry out engagement activities themselves.
l Both the enterprise and the stakeholder are expected to act in good faith in engagement
activities. This means that the enterprise engages with the genuine intention to
understand how relevant stakeholder interests are aected by its activities. It means that
the enterprise is prepared to address adverse impacts it causes or contributes to and that
stakeholders honestly represent their interests, intentions and concerns.
l Responsive engagement means that the enterprise seeks to inform its decision by
eliciting the views of those likely to be aected by the decision. It is important to
engage potentially impacted stakeholders and rightsholders prior to taking any
decisions that may impact them.
7
This involves the timely provision of all information
needed by the potentially impacted stakeholders and rightsholders to be able to
make an informed decision as to how the decision of the enterprise could aect
their interests. It also means there is follow-through on implementation of agreed
QUESTIONS RELATED TO THE OVERVIEW OF DUE DILIGENCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
6. OECD (2011), Commentary on General Policies, Para 25.
7. In some cases, this may be required, for example, when the right to information is part of the realisation
of human rights.
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commitments, ensuring that adverse impacts to impacted and potentially impacted
stakeholders and rightsholders are addressed including through provision of remedies
when enterprises have caused or contributed to the impact(s).
l Ongoing engagement means that stakeholder engagement activities continue
throughout the lifecycle of an operation or activity and are not a one-o endeavour.
Meaningful stakeholder engagement is a key component of the due diligence process.
However this Guidance is not intended to serve as a comprehensive overview of this issue. Many
resources exist to help enterprises carry out and deal with common challenges with respect to
stakeholder engagement activities (e.g. OECD, 2015c).
Q10. When is stakeholder engagement important in the context of due diligence?
Meaningful stakeholder engagement is important throughout the due diligence process.
Engaging with impacted and potentially impacted stakeholders and rightsholders may be espe-
cially relevant when an enterprise is:
l identifying actual or potential adverse impacts in the context of its own activities.
l engaging in assessment of business relationships with respect to real or potential
adverse impacts.
l devising prevention and mitigation responses to risks of adverse impacts caused or
contributed to by the enterprise.
l identifying forms of remedy for adverse impacts caused or contributed to by the
enterprise and when designing processes to enable remediation.
l tracking and communicating on how actual or potential identied human rights
impacts in the context of its own activities are being addressed.
Additionally, in some cases, stakeholder engagement or consultation is a right in and of itself.
8
5
FOR EXAMPLE, the right of workers to form or join trade unions and their right to
bargain collectively are internationally-recognised human rights. For this reason, it is
important to engage with trade unions or workers’ representatives when engaging
with workers on these issues. Moreover, industrial relations is a form of stakeholder
engagement.
For certain types of adverse impacts which result in collective harms (such as corruption which
collectively harms the populations of the jurisdiction in which it occurs or greenhouse gas emis-
sions which contribute to collective, transboundary harms), broad engagement with impacted or
8. For example, the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples provides that States consult and
cooperate with indigenous peoples concerned in order to obtain their free, prior and informed consent
(FPIC) in a number of situations, including the approval of projects aecting their land and territories or
other resources (see Articles 19 and 32). The ILO Convention No. 169, which is legally binding for countries
that have ratied it, requires State Parties to consult with indigenous peoples with the objective of reaching
agreement or consent on proposed measures (see Article 6).
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potentially impacted stakeholders and rightsholders may not be possible. In these cases, engage-
ment with credible stakeholder representatives or proxy organisations (e.g. NGOs, representative
public bodies, etc.) may be useful.
Beyond stakeholder engagement, enterprises may also wish to consult with experts on specic
issues or contexts (e.g. academics, NGOs, local organisations) for advice when developing and
implementing due diligence activities.
Q11. How can an enterprise engage with potentially vulnerable stakeholders?
Identifying and seeking to remove potential barriers to stakeholder engagement (e.g. language, cul-
ture, gender and power imbalances, divisions within the community etc.) is important to ensuring
it is eective.
5
FOR EXAMPLE, sharing information orally in a community where literacy is low.
Additionally some individuals or groups may face heightened risks of vulnerability or marginalisa-
tion, for example due to social stigmatisation. Often the most vulnerable stakeholders will also
be the most signicantly aected by an enterprise’s activities. For example, stakeholders such as
women, children, and socially marginalised communities may be aected more signicantly by
an enterprise activity, or in dierent ways, and may need additional attention in the context of
stakeholder engagement activities.
Many resources exist on how to deal with potential barriers to engagement and engaging with
specic vulnerable stakeholder groups.
9
Enterprises can collaborate at an industry or multi-industry level as well as with relevant stake-
holders throughout the due diligence process, although they always remain responsible for
ensuring that their due diligence is eectively carried out.
usee Section I, Characteristics of Due Diligence, Box 2
Q12. How can enterprises collaborate in carrying out due diligence?
Many of the due diligence recommendations in the Guidance may be carried out in collaboration
with others, such as other industry actors, in partnership with trade unions or through multi-
stakeholder initiatives.
5
FOR EXAMPLE, enterprises may partner with or enter directly into agreements with
trade unions in order to facilitate worker involvement in the design and implementation
of due diligence processes, the implementation of standards on workers’ rights and the
raising of grievances. Agreements with trade unions can take various forms and can be
made at the workplace, enterprise, sectoral or international level. They include collective
bargaining agreements, Global Framework Agreements, protocols and memoranda
of understanding.
9. See, for example, OECD (2016c), Annexes B-D.
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Collaboration can be benecial in pooling knowledge on sector risks and solutions, increasing
leverage, to the extent feasible, with shared business relationships, and making due diligence
more ecient for all, for example through recognition of existing assessments of business rela-
tionships and through common reporting frameworks for business relationships. Cost sharing
and savings is often a benet to sector collaboration.
usee Annex Q18, Q27-Q28, Q37 and Box 5
BOX 3. GOOD GOVERNANCE FOR DUE DILIGENCE COLLABORATIVE
INITIATIVES
The following list includes examples of good governance that may help an enterprise
in determining whether the collaborative initiative that it is engaged with is credible.
The initiative:
l has established a functioning, accessible and eective grievance mechanism that
enables stakeholders to raise concerns relating to the activities of the initiative
itself, without fear of retribution*
l has a process for enabling stakeholder and expert consultation on the objectives
and activities of the initiative.
l has an eective process for communicating details of actual or potential adverse
impacts to participating enterprises in a timely manner in order to support
enterprises in performing their own due diligence activities.
l has a process for regular review, including monitoring and evaluating whether
the initiative itself is meeting its own aims and objectives, including, as necessary,
updating of its policies, activities and any guidance provided to participating
enterprises.
l has given consideration to where there could be actual or potential conicts of
interest between the management personnel of the initiative and companies,
and has established processes to manage potential conicts of interest.
l publicly provides details of its own internal governance structure, stang,
resources and oversight mechanisms.
l reports on its evaluations of whether it is meeting its own aims and objectives in
relation to responsible sourcing practices.
l allows for mutual recognition, subject to appropriate quality control, of other due
diligence initiatives.
* This refers to grievance mechanisms pertaining to the initiative’s activities and not to grievance
mechanisms that initiatives may establish to facilitate the provision of remedy between impacted
stakeholders or rightsholders and the members of the initiative.
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Participation in an initiative does not shift responsibility from the enterprise to the initiative for
adverse impacts that it causes, contributes to or to which it is directly linked.
Where an enterprise engages in collaboration in carrying out due diligence it should rst assess
the quality of the initiative. This could include:
l Seeking the views of relevant stakeholders about the credibility of the initiative.
l Assessing whether the initiative and its processes are credible, meaning whether they
align with the recommendations in this Guidance.
l Ensuring that collaborative approaches are applied and tailored to the enterprise in the
ways necessary to constitute suciently robust due diligence.
l Being active participants in the collaboration.
l Applying good governance when the collaboration is carried out through a formal
initiative.
usee Box 3
Q13. Can collaboration pose risks under competition law?
While in many cases enterprises can collaborate on due diligence without breaching competition
law, enterprises and the collaborative initiatives in which they are involved should take proactive
steps to understand competition law issues in their jurisdiction and avoid activities which can be
seen as breach of competition law.
5
FOR EXAMPLE, enterprises and the collaborative initiatives in which they are involved
may:
l Seek the advice of competition authorities if they are in doubt as to whether a
particular course of conduct or co-operative activity may be viewed as contrary to
competition law and therefore raise regulatory risks.
l Establish transparency measures around collaborative initiatives to mitigate
competition concerns. Competition authorities could be more sceptical of initiatives
or agreements amongst competitors if conduct is completely private. Furthermore,
transparency can help to bring to light potentially problematic issues and thus ensure
they are addressed quickly.
l Establish anti-trust compliance programmes. Advice on how to best design and enforce
compliance programmes is often provided by competition authorities in specic
jurisdictions.
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Each jurisdiction will have dierent rules with respect to competition law issues; however, there are
some guiding questions enterprises may consider when assessing concerns under competition
law with regard to their RBC initiatives.
5
FOR EXAMPLE
l Does the collaboration or initiative involve an agreement between competitors?
l Can the collaboration or initiative be viewed as a per se violation of competition law?
(i.e. does it involve price xing, bid rigging (collusive tenders), output restrictions, and
market division (or sharing)?
l Does the collaboration or initiative have an anti-competitive eect (i.e. impacts on
consumer markets such as higher prices or limiting availability of goods/services),
regardless of the fact that it does not seek to restrict competition?
l On balance, do the pro-competitive eects of the collaboration or initiative outweigh
the anti-competitive eects?
l Are there public interest benets produced by the collaborative or initiative that can
be included in or override a balancing test?
usee Capobianco, Gillard and Bijelic, 2015
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
QUESTIONS RELATED TO
THE DUE DILIGENCE PROCESS
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A.1
EMBED RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
INTO POLICIES AND MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS
Devise, adopt and disseminate a combination of policies on RBC issues that articulate the enter-
prise’s commitments to the principles and standards contained in the OECD Guidelines for MNEs
and its plans for implementing due diligence, which will be relevant for the enterprise’s own
operations, its supply chain and other business relationships.
usee Section II, 1.1
Q14. What goes into RBC policies?
usee Section II, 1.1
As noted in the Guidance, an enterprise’s RBC policies will include commitments on matters cov-
ered by the OECD Guidelines for MNEs and will address in more detail commitments with respect
to the enterprise’s most signicant risks.
It may also be useful for an enterprise to use RBC policies to explain how it prioritises in the con-
text of its RBC due diligence (i.e. why some risks are considered more signicant than others).
RBC polices can also stipulate how an enterprise will implement its responsibilities – how it will
approach due diligence, stakeholder engagement, and remediation. In this regard it can also
outline the enterprise’s expectations in implementing its RBC policy with respect to workers
(including its employees, temporary workers and others who perform work for it) and its business
relationships.
usee Annex Q18
The enterprise’s RBC polices may be tailored to local contexts or operations.
For example, a subsidiary of a large MNE operating in a country with specic labour risks may adapt
the RBC policy of their parent to address these context-specic issues.
Q15. What expertise can be drawn upon in developing RBC policies? usee Section II, 1.1
Strong model policies already exist for many sectors in the context of industry or multi-stakehold-
er initiatives. An enterprise may choose to adopt or build upon these, provided that they full the
recommendations under Section II, 1.1 of the Guidance and are appropriate to the enterprise’s
sector or geography.
10
Consultation with relevant stakeholders may be useful in developing RBC policy. This may be par-
ticularly relevant in contexts in which strong model policies do not already exist. Guidance from
employer organisations, industry associations, relevant NGOs, or multi-stakeholder initiatives can
also be helpful in developing policy approaches.
usee Annex Q8-11
Involving the relevant units of an enterprise in policy development can help in identifying realistic
and ecient approaches to implementation of a policy.
usee Annex Q16
10. For example, see OECD (2016a), “Model Supply Chain Policy for a Responsible Global Supply Chain of
Minerals from Conict-Aected and High-Risk Areas”; see also OECD (2017a), “Model Enterprise Policy for
Responsible Agriculture Supply Chains”.
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Seek to embed the enterprise’s policies on RBC issues into the enterprise’s oversight bodies.
Embed the enterprise’s policies on RBC issues into management systems so that they are
implemented as part of the regular business processes, taking into account the poten-
tial independence, autonomy and legal structure of these bodies that may be foreseen in
domestic law and regulations.
usee Section II, 1.2
Q16. Which teams or business units will be relevant to consider when developing
and aligning objectives with the enterprise’s RBC policies?
usee Section I, Characteristics of Due Diligence- The Essentials; Section II, 1.2
What alignment across teams and business units will look like in practice will depend heavily on
an enterprise’s specic characteristics such as the nature of its activities, size, and the nature of
the specic risks it faces. Enterprises can consider which units of their business operations could
impact observance of its RBC policies to identify which must be considered in ensuring aligned
objectives.
These may include:
l Those making high-level decisions about the enterprise (e.g. boards and high-level
management).
l Those in charge of compliance (e.g. legal, compliance, human resources, environment
departments, on the ground management).
l Those making decisions about new business relationships (e.g. sourcing departments,
procurement departments, sales departments, investment fund managers.
usee Table 5
l Those in charge of development or oversight of products and operations linked to risk
(e.g. product designers, operational and technical leads).
l Those responsible for sales and marketing of products or services.
These units may also be involved in actually carrying out steps of a due diligence approach (such
as developing RBC policies and implementing management systems or identifying or preventing
and mitigating impacts).
Depending on an enterprise's structure it will also be important to ensure alignment across sub-
sidiary bodies, franchises or local oces with core commitments and processes, although these
bodies may tailor their RBC policies to the local context.
usee Annex Q14
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TABLE 5. EXAMPLE OF DEPARTMENTS AND FUNCTIONS POTENTIALLY RELEVANT
TO IMPLEMENTATION OF DUE DILIGENCE
DEPARTMENTS
AND/OR FUNCTIONS
ISSUES
*
Sustainability, CSR,
Ethical sourcing
Potentially many/all of the issues under the OECD Guidelines for
MNEs as these departments/functions are often the lead/focal
point/coordinator on RBC issues
Environment
and/or social
l environment
l health and safety
l human rights
l other social issues where no other department / function
addresses
Human resources
l employment and industrial relations
l occupational health and safety
l human rights
l recruitment
Worker representatives,
trade union representatives
l employment and industrial relations
l occupational health and safety
l human rights
Operations, production
l environment
l occupational health and safety
l human rights
l consumer protection
Legal
l legal compliance
l employment and industrial relations
l anti-bribery & corruption
l human rights
l consumer protection
l disclosure
l contracting with business relationships
Compliance,
ethics/integrity
l compliance more generally
l anti-bribery & corruption
Procurement,
supply chain,
business relationships
l full range of OECD Guidelines for MNEs issues in the supply
chain, with business relationships
l screening, contracting and monitoring supply chain/business
relationships for these issues
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OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
TABLE 5. EXAMPLE OF DEPARTMENTS AND FUNCTIONS POTENTIALLY RELEVANT
TO IMPLEMENTATION OF DUE DILIGENCE
Sales and marketing l human rights
l consumer protection
l disclosure
Community development
l stakeholder engagement
l environment
l community health & safety
l human rights
l disclosure
External aairs, reporting
l stakeholder engagement
l disclosure
Risk Management
l potentially all issues
Audit
l potentially all issues
Senior Management
l potentially all issues
Board/Owners
l potentially all issues
* Non-exhaustive list of issues under the OECD Guidelines for MNEs that may be particularly relevant to the
department / function to consider in carrying out their role in due diligence or contributing their expertise
Q17. What are the distinctions in the role of the board and management in
ensuring RBC is embedded?
usee Section II, 1.2
Boards will generally be involved in approving an enterprise’s RBC policies. They may also be
involved in taking decisions about a business strategy which may have implications for RBC.
Additionally, they may intervene in instances where the RBC policies are not being implemented
and request management to take action. It can be useful to appoint board member(s) with exper-
tise on and responsibility for RBC issues. In this respect the G20/OECD Principles of Corporate
Governance recognised that an important responsibility of the board of public enterprises is
to oversee the risk management system and systems designed to ensure that the corporation
obeys applicable laws, including tax, competition, labour, environmental, equal opportunity, anti-
corruption, and health and safety laws (OECD, 2015a, Ch.VI). Management, on the other hand, will
be responsible for developing a strategy to ensure the RBC policy is implemented.
While the role of boards and management is distinct, in practice high-level management
personnel may sit on enterprise boards and thus play a dual role.
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EMBED RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT INTO POLICIES AND MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS
Incorporate RBC expectations and policies into engagement with suppliers and other business
relationships.
usee Section II, 1.3
Q18. How can RBC expectations be built into business relationships?
usee Section II, 1.3
In addition to articulating expectations of business relationships in the enterprise’s RBC policies,
additional steps can be taken to ensure that RBC expectations are built into business relationships.
5
FOR EXAMPLE, as noted in the Guidance, expectations of new business relationships
can be communicated and agreed to through formal agreements or documentation
(e.g. through supplier codes of conduct, joint venture contracts, side letters to investee
entities etc.). These agreements or documents may include:
l Expectations that business relationships meet the OECD Guidelines for MNEs and/or
the Guidance or aligned standards.
l Expectations about transparency, monitoring and reporting by the business
relationships.
l Specication about whether/how the business relationships are expected to
cascade requirements to their own business relationships through the supply chain
or value chain.
l Grounds for terminating the contract due to failure to meet expectations regarding
the OECD Guidelines for MNEs.
Departments in charge of making decisions on new business relationships may consider RBC
criteria before entering a new business relationship. This may be done through the application
of pre-qualication processes, bidding criteria, or screening criteria which takes into account
RBC issues.
In many instances a business relationship (such as a supplier) will have many customers and may
provide services and products to more than one industry sector. With this in mind, in some in-
stances it may be impractical or burdensome for an enterprise to impose its own expectations of its
suppliers/business relationships without considering existing or potentially conicting expectations
placed on the business relationship by their other customers/relationships. Enterprises can address
this challenge by:
l aligning with international and industry-wide standards with respect to supply chain
due diligence expectations.
l collaborating with other industry actors on common expectations of business
relationships, including through common RBC policies and reporting frameworks.
usee Annex Q12
l engaging with business relationships on how to reduce conicting requirements and
streamline them across customers, and specifying additional initiatives, policies, or
programs for mutual recognition.
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IDENTIFY AND ASSESS ACTUAL AND POTENTIAL
ADVERSE IMPACTS ASSOCIATED WITH THE ENTERPRISE’S
OPERATIONS, PRODUCTS OR SERVICES
A.2
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
Carry out a broad scoping exercise to identify all areas of the business, across its operations and
relationships, including in its supply chains, where RBC risks are most likely to be present and
most signicant.
usee Section II, 2.1
Q19. What is meant by scoping and how broad should an enterprise’s scoping
exercise be?
usee Section II, 2.1
Scoping refers to an initial process of identication of general areas of signicant risk across
an enterprise’s own operations (e.g. activities and product lines) and its business relationships
(including all stages of the supply chain or value chain). Scoping is intended to be broad and to
serve as an initial exercise to enable prioritisation. Assessment (under Section II, 2.2), on the other
hand, refers to a more in-depth process that seeks to identify and evaluate prioritised risks related
to a specic business activity or relationship.
usee Annex Q23-Q28
How scoping is undertaken in practice, particularly with respect to scoping risks across business
relationships will vary according to the characteristics of an enterprise.
5
FOR EXAMPLE, an institutional investor may rely on market-research services and other
external resources (civil society reports, media etc.) to scope for risks in its investment
portfolio, whereas a retailer may map the structure of its supply chain and identify gen-
eral areas of risk based on specic geographic, sectoral, product or enterprise factors.
However, if it is brought to the enterprise’s attention (e.g. through reports, stakeholder engage-
ment, grievance mechanism) that a product line or subcomponent is associated with particular
risks, it is important to consider the information alongside other information gathered during the
scoping exercise.
BOX 4. WHERE DOES SUPPLY CHAIN MAPPING FIT INTO THE
SCOPING AND ASSESSMENT PROCESS?
During the scoping process, it will be important for enterprises to map their general
operations and the structure of their supply chains in order to identify higher-risk
activities, geographies, products or business relationships. As the enterprise
hones-in on these higher-risk areas, it may then carry out a more detailed mapping
of its actual individual business relationships in order to identify specic relation-
ships for further assessment. (continued on next page)
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BOX 4. WHERE DOES SUPPLY CHAIN MAPPING FIT INTO THE
SCOPING AND ASSESSMENT PROCESS?
For example, an automotive enterprise may identify during its scoping exercise
that its batteries are likely to hold more signicant risks than its other compo-
nents, based on known sector information. At this juncture, it is unlikely that the
enterprise will have detailed information on specic sub-suppliers and countries
of origin to commence detailed assessment of its battery supply chain. Rather,
they would rst seek to gather additional information on where its batteries are
actually being made, mapping the higher-risk stages of the supply chain for these
products, the likely countries of origin for the materials in the battery, and the
quality and nature of any due diligence carried out by high-risk sub-suppliers. Only
then can the enterprise move on to prioritise individual business relationships
for in-depth assessment and action.
For example, after looking across its product lines, an enterprise operating in
the footwear sector may identify its leather footwear as being associated with
signicant risks in light of labour and environmental risks linked to the tanning
process. The enterprise may then map specic business relationships (e.g. tan-
neries) linked to the production of its leather products in order to prioritise indi-
vidual suppliers operating in higher-risk geographies for further assessment.
Q20. What is meant by sector, product, geographic, and enterprise-level risks?
usee Section II, 2.1
Considering sector risks, product risks, geographic risk factors and enterprise-level risk factors
may be helpful in scoping risks in an enterprise’s own operations as well as its business relation-
ships. These risk factors are determined by past impacts and emerging issues.
l Sector risks are risks that are prevalent within a sector globally as a result of the
characteristics of the sector, its activities, its products and production processes.
For example, the extractive sector is often associated with risks related to a large
environmental footprint and impacts on local communities. In the garment and
footwear sector, risks associated with respect for trade union rights, occupational
health and safety and low wages are prevalent, amongst others.
11
11. See OECD(2017a) for more information on risks in the garment and footwear sector; see OECD (2016c) for
more information on risks linked to the extractives sector.
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OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
l Product risks are risks related to inputs or production processes used in the
development or use of specic products. For example, garment products with
beading or embroidery hold a higher risk of informal employment and precarious
work and phones and computers may contain components that are at risk of being
mined from conict areas.
l Geographic risks are conditions in a particular country which may make sector risks
more likely. Geographic risk factors can generally be classied as those related to the
regulatory framework (e.g. alignment with international conventions), governance
(e.g. strength of inspectorates, rule of law, level of corruption), socio-economic
context (e.g. poverty and education rates, vulnerability and discrimination of specic
populations) and political context (e.g. presence of conict).
l Enterprise-level risks are risks associated with a specic enterprise such as weak
governance, a poor history of conduct in relation to respecting human rights,
labour rights, anti-corruption standards, environmental standards, or a lack of culture
around RBC.
Q21. What are example sources of information for desk-based research?
usee Section II, 2.1
Most sector and product risks as well as situations in particular countries are well known or easily
understood from information that is readily available. For instance, hazardous environmental and
health eects of technical processes and products are generally suciently understood within sectors.
Reports provided by international organisations, civil society organisations, NHRIs, government
agencies, trade unions, and employer and business associations may provide valuable informa-
tion throughout the due diligence process, but particularly during the scoping phase. Media
articles may also provide an understanding of the local, regional, and national social and political
situation.
usee Table 6 for a list of document-based resources
It is important for enterprises to evaluate the accuracy and credibility of resources that they rely
on for risk information. This is especially true for inherited sources, such as previous baseline
assessments and research done by a partner, acquired enterprise, or peer enterprise and other
secondary sources. This can be done through triangulating information to compare it with other
sources, considering the nature and source of the information, considering the date of publication
and consulting with third parties such as civil society organisations on points of doubt. However,
information presented in external reports does not need to be completely veried for an enter-
prise to use it as a starting point to dig further.
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WITH THE ENTERPRISE’S OPERATIONS, PRODUCTS OR SERVICES
TABLE 6. EXAMPLE OF DEPARTMENTS AND FUNCTIONS POTENTIALLY RELEVANT
TO IMPLEMENTATION OF DUE DILIGENCE
Primary Sources l Contracts, licenses, relevant regulation and legislation, enterprise
policy describing the legal and regulatory regime applicable to the
project or activity.
l Baseline studies/impact assessments commissioned by other parties,
or during earlier phases of the project.
l Data produced by government bodies on employment, poverty
levels, health and education standards, wages, conditions of work
and occupational health and safety, etc.
l Census data, data on income and poverty rates (this may be
unreliable in some developing economy contexts).
l Land mapping and other information about the project or activity.
l Key indicators collected through geographical information systems
maps and other sources.
l Other existing materials or inherited information in the case of
acquisition (if obtainable).
l Local community grievances and demand records.
Secondary Sources
l Studies and indices by academics, NHRIs, government agencies and
industry bodies.
l Studies and reports by inter-governmental organisations and
multilateral and bilateral development institutions.
l Studies and indices developed by NGOs and sectoral, national and
international trade union organisations.
l Information about community investment or development programs
related to other industry projects in the area or region.
l Studies undertaken by communities, for example indigenous
peoples or their representative organisations, about key issues that
may be relevant to project development.
l Available reports prepared by other enterprises operating in the local
area or region.
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WITH THE ENTERPRISE’S OPERATIONS, PRODUCTS OR SERVICES
Q22. How might information decits be addressed? usee Section II, 2.1 - 2.2
Certain strategies can be useful in addressing decits in information on risks linked to an enter-
prise’s own activities and its business relationships, taking into account relevant circumstances
and real limitations.
5
FOR EXAMPLE
l Grievance mechanisms and other monitoring platforms (e.g. national monitoring
committees) can be established to alert enterprises to real or potential adverse
impacts they may not have identied themselves.
usee Annex Q54
l Information or claims about actual or potential adverse impacts do not have to be
completely veried in order to trigger further assessment.
l Enterprises can engage with key stakeholders and experts to better
understand sector, product or geographic risks, for example, through roundtables.
Starting with the signicant areas of risk identied above, carry out iterative and increasingly
in-depth assessments of prioritised operations, suppliers and other business relationships in
order to identify and assess specic actual and potential adverse RBC impacts.
uSection II, 2.2
Q23. How can an enterprise assess risks of adverse impacts in its own activities?
usee Section II, 2.2
In many cases, enterprises are already carrying out self-assessments or engaging in external audits
or inspections on key risks in their sector, and in some contexts, such assessments are regulated
under domestic law. For example, labour inspections, environmental inspections required for
licensing, environmental impact assessments, anti-corruption compliance management systems,
know-your-counterparty processes, nancial audits, human rights impact assessments, and
product-licensing processes are all examples of common risk assessments that an enterprise may
already be carrying out or co-operating with relevant authorities on. Companies may modify or
complement existing assessments to reect international standards and RBC recommendations.
In addition to standard assessments that an enterprise may already employ, additional internal
assessments may be necessary to understand potential risks or actual adverse impacts with
respect to an enterprise’s own activities in order to ensure alignment with the RBC expectations
in the OECD Guidelines for MNEs.
5
FOR EXAMPLE, an enterprise may commission an external review of the implementation
of its discrimination and sexual harassment policies.
5
FOR EXAMPLE, a subsidiary may conduct environmental impact assessments related
to its activities and share them with a parent company.
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IDENTIFY AND ASSESS ACTUAL AND POTENTIAL ADVERSE IMPACTS ASSOCIATED
WITH THE ENTERPRISE’S OPERATIONS, PRODUCTS OR SERVICES
Q24. How can an enterprise prioritise which of its own operations or business
relationships to assess rst?
usee Section II, 2.2
For many enterprises, especially larger ones, it will not be possible to assess real or potential
adverse impacts across all operations and business relationships. Enterprises may prioritise opera-
tions or business relationships for assessment where the risk of adverse impacts is most signicant
usee Section II, 2.4 and Annex, Q3 for more guidance on most signicant impacts.
Some considerations in determining the above include:
l The operation or business relationship’s operations are in a country that holds
higher-risk (e.g. presence of conict, presence of vulnerable groups, weak rule of
law, high rates of corruption, etc.).
l The operation or business relationship involves an activity or production process
that is higher-risk (characterised by high employment of informal work, use of
hazardous chemicals, use of heavy machinery, etc.).
l Risks were identied in a previous assessment.
Importantly, business relationships are categorised as “high-risk” and prioritised for further
assessment on the basis of their risk prole and not on the strength of their relationship with the
enterprise.
5
FOR EXAMPLE, an electronics enterprise may ag enterprises it sources from which
operate in the extraction of minerals in conict-aected and high-risk regions as being
“high-risk” despite the fact that the electronics enterprise does not have direct contrac-
tual relationships with these business relationships.
At times, further prioritisation may be needed amongst high-risk business relationships. In these
cases, with a view of working towards assessing all existing high-risk business relationships, the
enterprise may prioritise the assessment of high-risk business relationships that are most signi-
cant in terms of the percentage of product that the enterprise sources (or countries in terms of the
percentage of sourcing).
Q25. How can an enterprise carry out an assessment of business relationships
prioritised during its scoping exercise?
usee Section II, 2.2
During the scoping exercise, the enterprise identies broad categories of risks linked to its business
relationships. Assessments are more detailed evaluations of prioritised risks which follow from a
scoping exercise. Examples of forms of assessments include supplier self-assessments, on-site
inspections and audits, amongst others. The type of assessment that an enterprise employs will
be tailored to the nature of the risk.
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WITH THE ENTERPRISE’S OPERATIONS, PRODUCTS OR SERVICES
5
FOR EXAMPLE
l On-site inspections may be appropriate to assess risks related to occupational health
and safety, product safety and environmental performance (amongst other risks).
l Document reviews may be appropriate when reviewing an enterprise’s compliance
with nancial reporting standards.
l Worker interviews and focus group discussions may be appropriate when assessing
labour and human rights risks, particularly in relation to those risks that are sensitive and
generally undocumented. In recognition that workers may not feel comfortable sharing
honest responses with management, interviews and focus group discussions may need
to be carried out in some cases by trusted third parties.
l Stakeholder engagement and consultations with relevant civil society organisations
may be appropriate when assessing negative impacts on local communities of
enterprise activities.
Q26. What can an assessment of business relationships cover and who should
conduct these assessments?
usee Section II, 2.2
For most types of risks, an assessment will cover the following:
l Actual adverse impacts or risks of impacts caused or contributed to by the business
relationship (e.g. unsafe handling of chemicals; payment of bribes to ocials),
including those associated with forthcoming projects or future activities.
l The capacity and willingness of the business relationship to carry out
due diligence.
l The adequacy of due diligence carried out, including the measures that the enterprise
or its business relationship is implementing to prevent and mitigate adverse impacts
(e.g. policy, compliance management systems, assessments of sub-suppliers, facility
upgrading, providing access to grievance mechanisms).
It is useful that those carrying out assessments demonstrate the following competencies:
l Expertise on the relevant risks that the enterprise is assessing for (e.g. human rights,
health and safety, corruption), including an understanding of the best methodology
for identifying actual and potential adverse impacts within the local context.
l Knowledge of international and national standards related to the adverse impact.
l Capability to conduct the assessment within the local context (e.g. language skills).
It is not likely that one individual will have the above competencies across all risk areas and
across all contexts. In light of this challenge, assessments may be conducted by teams that have,
together, all of the above competencies.
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WITH THE ENTERPRISE’S OPERATIONS, PRODUCTS OR SERVICES
Q27. When to assess business relationships? usee Section II, 2.2
Enterprises are encouraged to carry out assessments:
l of existing high-risk business relationships (i.e. business relationships that involve
geographies, products or sectors, that have been identied as presenting high
risks of adverse impacts) that have not yet been assessed.
l prior to forming new rst-tier high-risk business relationships. usee Annex Q18
l when the context is likely to have changed among high-risk business relationships.
In some cases, risks of adverse impact are so prevalent in a particular region that assessing indi-
vidual business relationships will not produce any new information. In this case, the enterprise
may choose to focus immediately on preventing and mitigating adverse impacts.
5
FOR EXAMPLE, an enterprise may learn that sexual harassment is prevalent in an ex-
port processing zone (EPZ). Recognising how dicult it is to identify specic incidents
of sexual harassment, the enterprise may choose not to assess suppliers rst but rather
to encourage suppliers to carry out activities to prevent sexual harassment (e.g. training
of management).
In some cases, existing credible assessments of business relationships may already exist. Where
available, enterprises are encouraged to review their ndings and then focus eorts on preventing
or mitigating identied adverse impacts and monitoring progress.
Q28. How can enterprises assess business relationships with whom they do not
have contractual relationships?
usee Section, 2.2
There are various tools and approaches to assess high-risk business relationships when the
enterprise does not have a contractual relationship to help overcome challenges of visibility and
leverage.
5
FOR EXAMPLE, in order to improve visibility, enterprises may:
l request their business relationships to disclose information necessary for the
enterprise to assess risks related to their suppliers and business relationships, such
as information related to sub-suppliers and sub-contractors, or country of origin.
Enterprises may create and use common reporting templates within a sector to
reduce undue burden on business relationships.
usee Annex Q12
l use an existing traceability or chain of custody scheme
12
to gain visibility of its
business relationships further up the supply chain. This is most relevant for product-
oriented enterprises with physical supply chains.
12. Traceability is the process by which enterprises track materials and products through the supply chain.
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WITH THE ENTERPRISE’S OPERATIONS, PRODUCTS OR SERVICES
Where possible, in order to assess business relationships further up the supply chain for
adverse impacts, enterprises may:
l use existing credible assessments of business relationships further up the supply
chain, such as assessments shared through a collaborative initiative or passed
down through cascading disclosure or ow down provisions
13
on written agreements
or contracts.
l if no credible assessments exist, through information collected through cascading
reporting, ow down provisions or traceability, shared business relationships with
other industry actors can be identied to carry out or commission assessments of
common business relationships.
l assess the due diligence process of business relationships operating at control points
in its supply chain.
usee Box 5
BOX 5. ENGAGEMENT WITH BUSINESS RELATIONSHIPS OPERATING AT CONTROL
POINTS IN THE SUPPLY CHAIN
Enterprises can identify control points (sometimes referred to as “choke points”) by taking into
consideration:
l key points of transformation in the supply chain where traceability or chain of custody
information may be aggregated or lost.
l the number of actors, for example where there are relatively few enterprises that process or
handle a majority of inputs that they pass further down into a supply chain.
l the greatest point of leverage of enterprises towards the end of a supply chain.
l points where schemes and audit programmes already exist to leverage these systems and
avoid duplication.
‘Control point enterprises’ will likely have greater visibility and/or leverage over their own suppliers
and business relationships further up the supply chain than enterprises closer towards consumers or
end-users. Conducting due diligence on control point enterprises to determine whether they are in
turn conducting due diligence in line with this Guidance provides some comfort that risks of adverse
impact directly linked to suppliers have been identied, prevented and mitigated. Identication and
engagement with control points may be carried out through: including requirements in contracts
with supplier and business relationships that control points be identied (on a condential basis); and
by asking suppliers/business relationships to source from the control point enterprises that meet the
expectations of this Guidance, by using condential information-sharing systems on suppliers and/or
through industry wide schemes to disclose actors further up the supply chain.
13. Cascading disclosure refers to when an enterprise discloses information to immediate downstream
purchases, who then pass them down to their purchases; A ow down provision is a provision within a
general contract that is incorporated into sub tier agreements.
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IDENTIFY AND ASSESS ACTUAL AND POTENTIAL ADVERSE IMPACTS ASSOCIATED
WITH THE ENTERPRISE’S OPERATIONS, PRODUCTS OR SERVICES
Assess the enterprise’s involvement with the actual or potential adverse impacts identied in
order to determine the appropriate responses. Specically, assess whether the enterprise (a)
caused (or would cause) the adverse impact; or (b) contributed (or would contribute) to the
adverse impact; or whether (c) the adverse impact is (or would be) directly linked to its opera-
tions, products or services by a business relationship.
usee Section II, 2.3
Q29. What is meant by adverse impacts that are "caused", "contributed to” by the
enterprise or are "directly linked" to its operations, products or services by a
business relationship?
usee Section II, 2.3
Cause: An enterprise “causes” an adverse impact if the enterprise's activities
14
on their own
are sucient to result in the adverse impact.
5
FOR EXAMPLE, if an enterprise discriminates against women or racial minorities in
its hiring practices or if an enterprise pays a bribe to a foreign public ocial.
Contribute: An enterprise “contributes to” an impact if its activities, in combination with the
activities of other entities cause the impact, or if the activities of the enterprise cause, facilitate or
incentivise another entity to cause an adverse impact. Contribution must be substantial, meaning
that it does not include minor or trivial contributions.
The substantial nature of the contribution and understanding when the actions of the enter-
prise may have caused, facilitated or incentivised another entity to cause an adverse impact may
involve the consideration of multiple factors. The following factors can be taken into account:
l the extent to which an enterprise may encourage or motivate an adverse impact by
another entity, i.e. the degree to which the activity increased the risk of the impact
occurring.
l the extent to which an enterprise could or should have known about the adverse
impact or potential for adverse impact, i.e. the degree of foreseeability.
l the degree to which any of enterprise’s activities actually mitigated the adverse
impact or decreased the risk of the impact occurring.
The mere existence of a business relationship or activities which create the general conditions in
which it is possible for adverse impacts to occur does not necessarily represent a relationship of
contribution. The activity in question should substantially increase the risk of adverse impact.
5
FOR EXAMPLE, consider a retailer that sets a very short lead time for delivery of product
despite knowing from similar products in the past that the production time is not feasible,
and restricting the use of pre-approved sub-contracting.
l The action of setting a shorter than feasible lead time and restricting the use of sub-
contracting increased the risk of excessive overtime at the level of the manufacturer.
14. OECD (2011), Chapter IV, Para 42. states that “‘Activities can include both actions and omissions.
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l The degree of foreseeability of the impact may be high because the retailer knew
that lead times for similar past products were not feasible and that short lead times
commonly result in excessive overtime in the sector.
l If no mitigating steps were taken to decrease the risk of the impact occurring, the
retailer may be contributing to excessive overtime at the level of the manufacturer.
5
FOR EXAMPLE, consider a private equity investor which invests in a steel plant.
The investor sits on the board of the steel plant and regularly interacts with its manage-
ment. The investor votes against installing costly equipment which treats run-o from
the plant. As a result of the lack of run-o treatment, the drinking water of a local com-
munity is polluted by the run-o.
l Encouraging management of the project to avoid installing technology which may
prevent or mitigate environmental impacts on water sources increases the risk of
adverse impacts.
l The degree of foreseeability may be high if it is commonly known among
environmental management professionals in the steel industry that water treatment
equipment is required to avoid pollution of drinking water.
l If the investor undertook due diligence and supported an alternative treatment plan
for the run o, the risk of pollution of the water supply and the foreseeability of that
impact would have been lower, moving the investor away from a relationship of
contribution.
Directly linked: “Linkage” is dened by the relationship between the adverse impact and the
enterprise’s products, services or operations through another entity (i.e. business relationship).
“Directly linked” is not dened by direct contractual relationships, for example “direct sourcing”.
5
FOR EXAMPLE, if an enterprise sources cobalt mined using child labour which is then
used in its products the enterprise can be directly linked to the adverse impact (i.e. child
labour). In this case, the enterprise did not cause or contribute to the adverse impact
itself, but nevertheless there still can be a direct link between the enterprise’s products
and the adverse impact through its business relationships with the entities involved in
its sourcing of the cobalt (i.e. with the smelter, minerals trader, and mining enterprise
using child labour).
An enterprise’s relationship to adverse impact is not static. It may change, for example as situa-
tions evolve and depending upon the degree to which due diligence and steps taken to address
identied risks and impacts decrease the risk of the impacts occurring.
Generally an enterprise is most likely to cause an adverse impact in the context of activities associ-
ated with its own operations and an enterprise is most likely to be directly linked to adverse impacts
that are caused by business relationships. Contribution can occur in the context of activity related to
an enterprise’s own operations or through a business relationship.
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WITH THE ENTERPRISE’S OPERATIONS, PRODUCTS OR SERVICES
The above characterisations are not intended to override any legal liability issues. Domestic law may
have specic approaches or rules for determining relationship to impact for the purpose of informing
legal liability. For example, enterprises found to be guilty of criminal acts of bribery will likely be
considered to have caused or contributed to the impact under domestic laws on anti-corruption.
Q30. Why does the way an enterprise is involved with adverse impacts matter?
usee Section II, 2.3
The relationship of an enterprise to an adverse impact (i.e. whether it is caused or contributed
to by the enterprise or whether it is directly linked by a business relationship) is an important
consideration as it determines how an enterprise should respond to an impact and whether there
is also a responsibility to provide or cooperate in remediation.
usee Figure 2
FIGURE 2. Addressing adverse impacts
ADVERSE IMPACT
Note: More specic guidelines for addressing human rights adverse impacts are listed in OECD (2011),
Chapter IV.
CAUSED
by the enterprise
CONTRIBUTED TO
by the enterprise
DIRECTLY LINKED
to enterprise operations,
products or services
by a business relationship
REMEDY
actual impact
CEASE
OR PREVENT
potential impact
CEASE
OR PREVENT
contribution
Use LEVERAGE
to mitigate any
remaining impacts
to the greatest
extent possible
Use LEVERAGE
to inuence
the entity causing
the adverse impact
to prevent or
mitigate the impact
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IDENTIFY AND ASSESS ACTUAL AND POTENTIAL ADVERSE IMPACTS ASSOCIATED
WITH THE ENTERPRISE’S OPERATIONS, PRODUCTS OR SERVICES
Drawing from the information obtained on actual and potential adverse impacts, where nec-
essary, prioritise the most signicant RBC risks and impacts for action, based on severity and
likelihood. Prioritisation will be relevant where it is not possible to address all potential and
actual adverse impacts immediately. Once the most signicant impacts are identied and
dealt with, the enterprise should move on to address less signicant impacts.
usee Section II, 2.4
Q31. How can an enterprise prioritise its actions when seeking to prevent and
mitigate adverse impacts across its activities and business relationships?
usee Section I, Characteristics of Due Diligence – Due diligence can involve prioritisation
(risk-based); Section II, 2.4
When prioritising actions for response, the signicance of the actual or potential harm is the most
important factor.
15
However, recognising that enterprises may be exposed to a variety of signi-
cant adverse impacts, the imminence of harm may be considered secondarily.
5
FOR EXAMPLE, if a factory is found to be at imminent risk of a re due to dangerous
electrical systems, priority may be given to ensuring that the building is made safe and
workers are made aware of how to respond in the case of a re before addressing a risk of
water contamination which is potentially equally severe, but not expected to occur within
the next 5 years.
15. In the case of prioritising risks to human rights, the severity of a potential adverse impact should take precedence
over the likelihood.
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A.3
Stop activities that are causing or contributing to adverse impacts on RBC issues, based on
the enterprise’s assessment of its involvement with adverse impacts. Develop and implement
plans that are t-for-purpose to prevent and mitigate potential (future) adverse impacts.
usee Section II, 3.1
Q32. What is the dierence between preventing adverse impacts and mitigating
adverse impacts?
usee Section II, 3.1
Prevention refers to activities that are intended to avoid an adverse impact occurring in the rst
place (e.g. which reduce the risk of an adverse impact occurring); whereas mitigation refers to
activities that reduce the impact when an adverse impact does occur. Prevention is the primary
goal of due diligence.
5
FOR EXAMPLE
l With respect to occupational health and safety the removal of the hazard is
recognised as the best means to prevent injuries and ill health in the rst instance.
l Installation of water treatment processes may mitigate water pollution impacts by
decreasing the level of euents in the water.
5
FOR EXAMPLE
l Engaging in collective action in high-risk areas to train local entities on resisting
solicitation of bribes and improving local government capacity to monitor and
enforce anti-bribery laws can help to prevent bribery in the future.
l Co-operating with criminal prosecutions on bribery and duly reporting ocials
who solicited bribes can mitigate impact of bribery.
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Q33. How should an enterprise prevent and mitigate actual or potential impacts it
may cause or contribute to?
usee Section II, 3.1
First and foremost, enterprises should cease any activities that are causing or contributing to
actual adverse impacts.
There are a number of measures that an enterprise may take to prevent or mitigate future adverse
impacts in its own operations.
5
FOR EXAMPLE
l Adaptation/modication measures: At times adaption or modication of aspects of
an enterprise's operations, products or services may be necessary to preventing or
mitigating impacts, for example, rerouting an oil pipeline to avoid potential health
risks to local communities, changing production processes to avoid the use of toxic
substances.
l Facility upgrading: Some impacts may only be prevented by investing in facility and
equipment improvements. Such investments may include: lighting, ventilation, access
to re exits, new machinery, technology to control adverse impacts, etc.
l Policies: The development of enterprise policies and accompanying protocols for
their implementation can be in of themselves a means of preventing impacts from
occurring. For example, an enterprise policy to not discriminate in the hiring process
and accompanying processes can help prevent discrimination.
usee Section II, 1.1-1.2
l Training: Eective training of workers, employees and management can help
to prevent adverse impacts from occurring. Training may cover a wide range of
issues such as, but not limited to, the enterprise’s policies and protocols, laws and
obligations, safe handling of machinery, chemicals, etc., and awareness raising on
how to identify risks.
usee Section II, 1.2(f); 1.3(d)
l Red-ag systems: This involves identifying red-ags, or indicators for risks, and
developing procedures for the enterprise to follow if risks of causing or contributing to
adverse impact are identied.
l Address systemic issues: Enterprises retain responsibility to address adverse impacts
that they cause or contribute to, even when operating in contexts where systemic
issues are prevalent. While it is not the responsibility of enterprises to resolve systemic
issues at a societal level, enterprises may nd that addressing such challenges may be
eective in preventing or mitigating adverse impacts.
usee Box 6 for more information
on addressing systemic risks
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BOX 6. ADDRESSING SYSTEMIC ISSUES
Systemic issues refer to problems or challenges that are prevalent within a context and are driven by
root causes outside of the enterprise’s immediate control, but that nonetheless increase the risk of
adverse impacts within the enterprise’s own operations or supply chain. Systemic risks may arise from
governance failures and the failure of governments to full their duty to enforce the laws and protect
human rights. Example systemic issues include poor access to schools and high rates of poverty which
can increase the risk of child labour, extensive bribery and corruption within the government, systematic
discrimination of minority groups and the widespread harassment and abuse of women and girls within
society. Although enterprises are not responsible for the failure of governments, the decision to conduct
activities in contexts where systemic risks exist will increase the nature and extent of due diligence.
There are a number of ways that enterprises can seek to address risks linked to systemic issues.
For example, enterprises may:
l Collaborate across sectors – Systemic risks often touch many sectors within a given context.
Therefore, enterprises may choose to co-ordinate and collaborate across sectors to scale-up
eective prevention and mitigation measures. In this way, the problem is not merely pushed
from one industry to another.*
l Engage government - Acknowledging that there are legal and practical limits, in contexts
in which the government is not fullling its duty to protect, enterprises may use their
leverage with government (local or national) to encourage the government to aect change,
for example through better enforcement of laws and regulations, or facilitation of RBC.
Engagement may include a number of measures, such as open letters to the government,
engagement through multi-stakeholder initiatives, participation in dialogues, etc. Enterprises
may also engage with home governments to encourage them to advocate for RBC.
l Identify eective existing initiatives – For common sectoral risks, enterprises may be able to
draw on recommended prevention and mitigation approaches developed by governments,
industry associations, multi-stakeholder initiatives, or peers in the sector. Identifying existing
initiatives and their objectives will help an enterprise understand how it can utilise existing
strategies to prevent and mitigate systemic risks. For example, an enterprise may be able to
rely on existing grievance mechanisms within the community.
Eorts to address systemic issues may take much time before tangible results are seen, however, this
should not undermine or discourage action to try to respond to systemic issues. Nonetheless, enter-
prises operating in contexts with systemic issues driving adverse impacts in their own operations and
supply chain should be prepared to be transparent in their decision and rationale for remaining and
consider whether they are able to responsibly continue to operate in or source from such contexts
during the course of any of the above eorts. In many cases, increased eorts will be necessary to
monitor and prevent adverse impacts in their own operations or in their supply chains while seeking
to address more systemic issues at the same time.
* For example, in contexts in which child labour is a systemic risk, eliminating child labour from one sector may simply
push children into employment in another. Therefore, cross-sectoral approaches are encouraged.
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Based on the enterprise’s prioritisation, develop and implement plans to seek to prevent or miti-
gate actual or potential adverse impacts on RBC issues which are directly linked to the enter-
prise’s operations, products or services by business relationships.
usee Section II, 3.2
Q34. How can an enterprise seek to prevent and mitigate actual or potential
impacts directly linked to its operations, products or services by a business
relationship?
usee Section II, 3.2
The expectation that enterprises seek to prevent or mitigate adverse impacts directly linked to their
operations, products or services by a business relationship is not intended to shift responsibility from
the entity causing or contributing to an adverse impact to the enterprise with which it has a business
relationship.
16
The responsibility for the impact remains with the entity or entities that are causing or
contributing to the impacts.
17
However, while the enterprise may not be able to address the impact
itself, it should seek to inuence its business relationship to prevent or mitigate the adverse impacts.
usee Section I, Characteristics of Due Diligence -Due diligence does not shift responsibilities
In this respect, actions that can be taken to seek to prevent and mitigate adverse impacts linked
to a business relationship include:
l Modifying business operations or activities to prevent and mitigate adverse impacts
linked to the enterprise’s business relationships.
usee Annex Q35
l Using leverage to aect change in the practices of the entity that is causing the
adverse impact(s) to the extent possible.
usee Annex Q36-37
l Supporting business relationships in the prevention or mitigation of adverse impact(s).
usee Annex Q38
l Disengaging from the business relationship. usee Annex Q39
l Addressing systemic issues. usee Box 6
Q35. How can an enterprise modify its operations or activities to prevent and
mitigate adverse impacts linked to its business relationships?
usee Section II, 3.2
Many of the management systems that an enterprise establishes under Section II, 1.1 of the
Guidance work to prevent and mitigate impacts in its supply chain by either decreasing the
likelihood of engaging with high-risk business relationships in the rst place or by increasing
its leverage with new suppliers/ business relationships. These can include measures related to
building RBC expectations into business relationships such as establishing pre-qualication or
bidding criteria based on RBC standards.
Additional measures that an enterprise may take to prevent and mitigate adverse impacts linked to
its business relationships involve adaptation or modication of aspects of its operations, products
or services.
16. OECD (2011), Chapter II, Para. 12.
17. Id.
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For example, embedding due diligence considerations into the product design process through
considering potential RBC risks of a product alongside other features, such as feasibility, cost and
demand, and determining whether to take a product from design to development, can avoid
risks in the future.
Q36. How can an enterprise use its leverage? usee Section II, 3.2(c)-(e)
Leverage is considered to exist “where the enterprise has the ability to eect change in the
wrongful practices of the entity that causes the harm.
18
What is an appropriate approach to using
leverage will depend on the impact in question, the degree of leverage an enterprise possesses with
its business relationship, and other characteristics specic to the sector and/or nature of the business
relationship. Enterprises may also pursue a combination of approaches in applying leverage.
5
FOR EXAMPLE, using leverage may include as appropriate to the sector and the specic
situation:
l Engagement with the business relationship to urge them to prevent and/or mitigate
impacts through letter-writing, emails, telephone calls or face-to-face meetings with
the business relationship at operational, senior management and/or board level to
express views on RBC issues.
l Building expectations around RBC and due diligence specically into commercial
contracts.
l Linking business incentives – such as the commitment to long-term contracts and
future orders – with performance on RBC.
l For investors, attendance and speaking at Annual General Meetings to express views
on RBC matters and using voting rights to express views on RBC issues, requesting
information from and engaging with investee companies to obtain relevant
information and make expectations clear.
l Engagement with regulators and policymakers on RBC issues for them to eect
change in the wrongful practices of the entity causing the harm.
l Communicating the possibility of disengagement if expectations around RBC are
not respected (e.g. through contractual clauses, enterprise policies, meeting with
management of the business relationship).
At times an enterprise may face limitations to using leverage or may not have leverage on its own.
usee Annex Q37
18. OECD (2011), Commentary on General Policies, Para 19.
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Q37. How can a lack of leverage be addressed?
Where an enterprise lacks leverage with its business relationships, it may seek to increase its lev-
erage to the extent possible.
5
FOR EXAMPLE, the enterprise may:
l Introduce RBC and due diligence expectations into commercial contracts.
l Establish commercial incentives linked to RBC criteria.
l Establish longer-term relationships with its suppliers or business relationships.
Enterprises that do not have leverage with their business relationships may increase their leverage
to the extent practicable by communicating common expectations and carrying-out activities in
collaboration.
5
FOR EXAMPLE
l Enterprises sourcing from the same supplier may develop and share a common
set of RBC requirements of the supplier. Similarly, enterprises sourcing from the
same supplier may use their combined leverage to encourage the shared suppliers
to implement eective corrective action measures with due consideration for
competition law.
usee Annex Q13
l Enterprises within a sector may work at a sector-wide or regional level to identify and
engage suppliers that operate at common control points in the sector supply chain.
l Enterprises may join geographic or issue-specic initiatives that seek to prevent and
mitigate adverse impacts in the areas identied (e.g. country, commodity or sector
roundtables, multi-stakeholder initiatives and on-the-ground programmes).
l Minority investors may write a joint letter to an investee company signalling
expectations on RBC and encouraging the company to prevent/mitigate impacts
as relevant.
The OECD Guidelines for MNEs also recognise that “there are practical limitations on the ability
of enterprises to eect change in the behaviour of their suppliers.”
19
In addition, laws of corpo-
rate governance may in some cases limit an enterprise’s ability to control or inuence behaviour,
such as between shareholders and investee companies, boards and management and parent
enterprises and its subsidiaries and/or joint ventures. The degree of leverage an enterprise has
over the business relationship causing the adverse impact is useful in considering what it can do
to persuade that entity to take action, however enterprises have a responsibility to carry out due
diligence and eectively exercise any leverage they may have.
19. OECD (2011), Commentary on General Policies, Para 21.
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Q38. How can an enterprise support a business relationship in the prevention or
mitigation of adverse impacts?
usee Section II, 3.2(b) and 3.2(g)
An enterprise may support its business relationships in implementing measures under Section II,
3.2 of the Guidance.
5
FOR EXAMPLE, an enterprise may:
l Partner with suppliers/business relationships to develop and implement corrective
action plans that are time-bound and outcome-oriented.
l Provide technical guidance to suppliers/business relationships – for example, in the
form of training, management systems upgrading, etc.
l Facilitate participation of suppliers/business relationships in broader sector-wide
initiatives or regional initiatives to prevent impacts.
l Facilitate linkages of suppliers/business relationships with local service providers.
l Facilitate access to nancing for suppliers/business relationships to help implement
corrective action plans, for example, through direct nancing, low-interest loans,
guarantees of continued sourcing, and assistance in securing nancing.
Q39. How can an enterprise approach disengagement? usee Section II, 3.2 (h)
As stated in the Guidance, disengagement from a business relationship may be appropriate as a
last resort after failed attempts at preventing or mitigating severe impacts; when adverse impacts
are irremediable; where there is no reasonable prospect of change; or when severe adverse
impacts or risks are identied and the entity causing the impact does not take immediate action
to prevent or mitigate them. A real possibility of disengagement is necessary in many instances
for an enterprise’s leverage to be eective. In these situations enterprises should also consider
and address the potential adverse impacts of a decision to disengage. If an enterprise determines
that disengagement is the most appropriate action, there are a range of actions that it may take
to ensure that its process for disengagement is responsible.
5
FOR EXAMPLE, the enterprise:
l Should comply with national laws, international labour standards and the terms of
collective bargaining agreements.
l May articulate escalation measures for disengagement upfront with the business
relationship.
l May provide detailed information supporting the decision to disengage to
management and to the trade union, where one exists.
l Where feasible, it is important to provide sucient notice of the disengagement to
the business relationship.
20
20. In instances where severe adverse impacts have been identied or where the enterprise does not deem prevention
or mitigation of the adverse impact feasible, it may not be possible for the enterprise to provide sucient notice to
its business relationship.
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In some instances it may be not be possible or practicable for an enterprise to end a business
relationship.
5
FOR EXAMPLE
l Where the term of the business relationship is dictated by contract or practical
considerations (e.g. an investment in a pooled portfolio; where an investment
manager’s clients do not agree that divestment is appropriate, a xed-term contract).
l Where the supplier is a crucial business relationship
21
(e.g. a rare earth mineral crucial
to core product which is only available from a small group of suppliers operating in a
high-risk context).
In these cases it is recommended that enterprises report the situation internally, continue to
monitor the business relationship, for example, through maintaining a knowledge database, and
revisit their decision to continue the business relationship where circumstances change or as part
of the enterprise’s long term strategy to systemically respond to all adverse impacts. It may also
be in the enterprise’s interest to explain the decision not to end the business relationship, how
this decision aligns with their policies and priorities, what actions are being taken to attempt to
apply leverage to mitigate the impacts, and how the business relationship will continue to be
monitored in the future.
Q40. How can an enterprise seek to prevent and mitigate adverse impacts linked to
business relationships with whom it does not have a contractual relationship?
usee Section II, 3.2
There are a number of ways in which an enterprise may seek to prevent and mitigate adverse
impacts linked to business relationships with whom it does not have a contractual relationship.
5
FOR EXAMPLE, enterprises may:
l Request contractual business relationships to direct their activities towards business
relationships that have been pre-qualied.
l Direct sourcing or other forms of business activities towards business relationships
operating at control-points in the supply chain that have credible due diligence
processes for their suppliers (in the context of supply chains).
usee Box 5
l Identify and work directly with high-risk business relationships with whom
the enterprise does not have a contractual relationship to prevent and mitigate
impacts in a similar fashion to the activities described under Q34.
21. A relationship could be deemed as crucial if it provides a product or service that is essential to the enterprise’s
business, and for which no reasonable alternative source exists.
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TRACK IMPLEMENTATION AND RESULTS
A.4
Track the implementation and eectiveness of the enterprise’s due diligence activities, i.e. its
measures to identify, prevent, mitigate and, where appropriate, support remediation of adverse
impacts, including with business relationships. In turn, use the lessons learned from tracking to
improve these processes in the future.
usee Section II, 4.1
Q41. What information is tracked under due diligence?
usee Section II, 4.1
Tracking involves rst and foremost assessing whether identied adverse impacts have been
responded to eectively. In addition to following up on responses to identied adverse impacts
enterprises may review their due diligence process, or relevant multi-stakeholder and industry
initiatives, more broadly to ensure that they are eective. This can occur periodically or be trig-
gered when tracking activities reveal that signicant adverse impacts are not being eectively
addressed.
Establishing appropriate qualitative and quantitative indicators can be helpful to tracking.
5
FOR EXAMPLE, relevant indicators may include:
l Percentage of impacted stakeholders engaged who feel adverse impacts have been
adequately addressed.
l Percentage/number of agreed action points that have been implemented according
to planned timelines.
l Percentage of impacted stakeholders who feel channels for raising grievances are
accessible, equitable and eective.
l Rate of recurring issues related to the identied adverse impact(s).
Indicators may be context specic and vary according the objectives and actions associated
with the enterprises due diligence process.
Q42. How can an enterprise track implementation and results? usee Section II, 4.1
How an enterprise tracks its implementation and results, including whether impacts have been
eectively addressed, will vary based on the context in which the enterprise operates, its size, and
the risks that it faces through its own activities and in its business relationships. In many cases,
an enterprise will need to look across a range of inputs, including assessment data, data from
grievance mechanisms, and stakeholder feedback to get a full picture as to whether impacts are
being addressed.
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5
FOR EXAMPLE, if an enterprise seeks to track how well it is addressing child labour linked
to its direct suppliers across a range of countries it may consider the following:
l At the site level, the enterprise may:
- track progress of individual suppliers against corrective action plans for
eliminating child labour.
- gather feedback from workers, workers’ representatives and trade unions on
whether or not child labour is eectively being addressed at each site.
- track cases of child labour identied and how those cases were handled (i.e.
what remedy was provided).
l At the global level, the enterprise may review assessment data, reported grievances,
and credible reports collected across all of its high-risk suppliers or higher-risk
geographies on an annual basis to review trends and progress against preventing and
mitigating child labour.
How often an enterprise tracks progress is likewise dependent upon the nature and severity of the
real or potential adverse impact the enterprise is tracking. For example, for more severe impacts
there is a greater urgency to determine that adverse impacts are being eectively addressed.
In many cases, activities to track implementation and results can be integrated into relevant,
existing internal monitoring and reporting processes.
Q43. Who is involved in tracking implementation and results within an enterprise?
usee Section II, 4.1
Responsibility for tracking implementation and results may be assigned to a number of indi-
viduals across business units or oces within the enterprise, as relevant.
5
FOR EXAMPLE
l A sourcing oce within an enterprise may have the primary responsibility for tracking
the implementation of supplier assessments and corresponding corrective action
measures.
l An enterprise’s buying department may hold the primary responsibility of tracking
rates at which orders are placed late, changed, or cancelled – all practices which may
contribute to labour risks with their suppliers.
l Operational level sta may seek feedback from impacted stakeholders and
rightholders on whether the impacts have been addressed (e.g. through consulting
local communities, collecting feedback from people who attend meetings and
forums, taking note of issues brought to remediation procedures).
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Senior management oversight of an enterprise’s progress with respect to implementation and
results can provide a more complete picture of the enterprise’s progress across the organisation
as a whole.
For example, systems that collect information at a local level (e.g. supplier assessment data), but
then are aggregated at a centralised department (e.g. headquarters or regional oce) may help
to identify trends more widely and can be used as a basis for sharing lessons learned across the
enterprise.
Q44. How can an enterprise respond to the results of its tracking?
usee Section II, 4.1 (e)-(f)
Tracking provides the enterprise with an understanding of whether the systems it has put into
place are eectively enabling the enterprise to avoid and address adverse impacts in its own
activities and in its supply chain or whether systems could be modied to be made more eective.
5
FOR EXAMPLE
l If an enterprise’s supplier assessment does not reveal any re safety risks and the
supplier then has a re, the enterprise may respond by reviewing how it assesses re
safety of its suppliers.
l If an enterprise implements internal training and other control measures against the
payment of bribes for licenses, and the enterprise learns through external reporting
that the payment of bribes for licenses persists, it may revise its internal controls to
better prevent and mitigate future infractions.
Where an enterprise’s due diligence processes or approach are not eective, an internal assess-
ment to understand why may be useful. Consulting employees involved in the due diligence
processes and external relevant stakeholders in this process may be helpful. Establishing senior
oversight of tracking also helps to ensure that lessons learned are taken into account and due
diligence systems can be continuously improved.
Q45. How to prioritise tracking activities? usee Section II, 4.1
Prioritisation for tracking activities should align with prioritisation decisions made in the context
of prevention and mitigation. In other words, enterprises should prioritise tracking those adverse
impacts they assessed to be most signicant and took action to prevent and mitigate. A broader
assessment of due diligence processes may be undertaken periodically or triggered when signi-
cant impacts are not being eectively addressed.
usee Annex Q3 and Q31
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A.5
COMMUNICATE HOW IMPACTS ARE ADDRESSED
Communicate externally relevant information on due diligence policies, processes, activities
conducted to identify and address actual or potential adverse impacts, including the ndings
and outcomes of those activities.
usee Section II, 5.1
Q46. What are appropriate forms of communicating publicly and to impacted
stakeholders?
usee Section II, 5.1
As outlined in Section II, 5.1 of the Guidance there is exibility in the form of public communica-
tion, provided that the information is easily accessible by the public. In addition, some jurisdic-
tions or stock exchanges may have specic reporting requirements with respect to due diligence.
Where an enterprise causes or contributes to human rights impacts it should communicate the
relevant information to impacted or potentially impacted rightsholders in a timely, culturally sen-
sitive and accessible manner. Accessibility of information means that it is not only physically acces-
sible, but also understandable and disclosed at a time and in a format, language, and location that
will best ensure those for whom it is intended will notice it and be able to use it eectively. This
information should be “sucient to demonstrate the adequacy of an enterprise’s response to the
particular human rights impact involved” and “in turn not pose risks to aected stakeholders,
personnel or to legitimate requirements of commercial condentiality.
22
The form of communication should also be accessible to the intended audience.
5
FOR EXAMPLE, enterprises may choose to communicate through:
l in-person meetings
l online dialogues
l consultation with impacted or potentially impacted rightsholders
l formal public reports
23
l the sharing of audit or assessment ndings with trade unions
l through an appropriate intermediary
In identifying the appropriate form of communicating with stakeholders the following guiding
questions may be useful:
l Who is the audience?
l How can the audience access information?
l What barriers in accessibility might exist for certain marginalised or
vulnerable groups?
l What is the capacity of the audience (language, literacy, location, time, availability,
technical competence)?
22. UN (2011), Principle 21, Commentary.
23. Id.
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l Are there privacy or safety issues?
l What have impacted or potentially impacted stakeholders and rightholders indicated
they nd important and useful in terms of information content and methods
of information sharing?
Enterprises may also wish to communicate with impacted or potentially impacted stakeholders and
rightsholders in case of signicant adverse impacts cause or contributed to by business relationships.
Appropriate forms of communication in these situations may include:
l Sharing labour, human rights, or environmental audit or assessment results with
impacted or potentially impacted rightsholders, while respecting condentiality
requirements.
l Communicating with impacted or potentially impacted rightsholders in collaboration
with the relevant business relationship(s).
l Communicating with impacted or potentially impacted rightsholders through
a multi-stakeholder or industry initiative that may have closer contact with the
rightsholders.
Q47. When information is commercially sensitive, how can relevant information still
be communicated?
usee Section II, 5.1
Communication should be carried out with due regard for commercial condentiality and other
competitive or security concerns.
5
FOR EXAMPLE
l Domestic law may sometimes prevent certain disclosures, or outline areas of
protected commercial information.
l Contracts between the enterprise and its business relationships may prevent certain
information from being disclosed (e.g. the identity of clients).
l Commercial condentiality considerations may prevent certain disclosures (e.g. price
information, supplier relationships)
l Where there are potential risks to stakeholders or sta (including arising from the
disclosure of personal information) full disclosure may not be an option.
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COMMUNICATE HOW IMPACTS ARE ADDRESSED
However, in certain circumstances, disclosing information may be fundamental to the corporate
responsibility to respect human rights.
5
FOR EXAMPLE
l Informing workers about their exposure to hazardous substances.
l Disclosure of the results of product or environmental testing necessary
for the eective protection of the rights to life or health.
l Disclosure of information about hazardous substances necessary for the eective
provision of medical treatment in the aftermath of an industrial disaster.
Certain approaches may be useful in communicating information to the extent possible while
respecting condentiality concerns.
5
FOR EXAMPLE
l limiting access to sensitive information to those approved by the information
provider.
l anonymising the source of information.
l providing a valid explanation or justication, where possible, for why the information
has not been shared.
l using third parties or innovative technologies that allow disclosure of key information
while protecting commercially sensitive data, for example, to disclose certain
information in aggregate or without identifying specic business relationships.
l delaying reporting until persons are no longer at risk, for example after a grievance or
risk has been addressed.
l providing assurance through other methods, such as inviting an independent third
party to review the enterprise’s due diligence processes and disclosing their ndings
publicly or to a relevant collaborative initiative.
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A.6
PROVIDE FOR OR COOPERATE IN REMEDIATION
WHEN APPROPRIATE
Q48. What is the relationship of remediation to due diligence?
usee Section II, 6
The provision of a remedy is not a component of due diligence but a separate, critical process that
due diligence should enable and support. Grievance and remediation processes interact with, and
may ultimately support due diligence by providing channels through which the enterprise can
become aware of and respond to RBC impacts. Inputs and feedback from remediation processes
can help strengthen identication of real and potential adverse impacts by highlighting issues
that may not have received sucient attention, and by providing inputs on how to eectively
respond to adverse impacts. However the following examples and explanations are not intended
to serve as a comprehensive overview of remedy.
When the enterprise identies that it has caused or contributed to actual adverse impacts,
address such impacts by providing for or cooperating in their remediation.
usee Section II, 6.1
Q49. What is meant by “remediation” and “remedy”?
usee Section II, 6.1 and 6.2
Remediation” and “remedy” refer to both the processes of providing remedy for an adverse
impact and to the substantive outcomes (i.e. remedy) that can counteract, or “make good”, the
adverse impact.
Q50. How can an enterprise identify appropriate forms of remedy? usee Section II, 6.1
The type of remedy or combination of remedies that is appropriate will depend on the nature
and extent of the adverse impact
usee Section II, 6.1(b). Appropriate forms of remediation are
articulated under Section II 6.1(b) of the Guidance, however, the following may also be helpful in
determining appropriate forms of remedy:
l Existing standards – In some cases domestic and international standards or laws exist
on what constitutes appropriate forms of remedy.
l Precedent – Where domestic and international standards do not exist, the enterprise
may seek to be consistent with what was provided in similar cases.
l Stakeholder preferences – The perspective of those aected on what is appropriate
remedy is important for human rights impacts.
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OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
When appropriate, provide for or cooperate with legitimate remediation mechanisms through
which impacted stakeholders and rightsholders can raise complaints and seek to have them
addressed with the enterprise.
usee Section II, 6.2
Q51. What are “legitimate remediation mechanisms”?
usee Section II, 6.2
Legitimate remediation mechanisms can include State-based or non-State-based process
through which grievances concerning enterprise-related adverse impacts can be raised and
remedy can be sought.
24
5
FOR EXAMPLE
l Legal processes such as prosecution, litigation and arbitration are common examples
of state-based processes that enable remediation.
l Non-judicial state-based mechanisms such as specialist government bodies,
consumer protection agencies, regulatory oversight bodies, environmental
protection agencies.
l The National Contact Points to the OECD Guidelines for MNEs are a State-based non-
judicial mechanism through which issues can be raised about implementation of the
OECD Guidelines for MNEs in specic instances.
usee Box 8
l Operational level grievance mechanisms where they meet the core criteria of
legitimacy, accessibility, predictability, equitability, compatibility with the OECD
Guidelines for MNEs, transparency and being dialogue-based.
l Global Framework Agreements between companies and Global Trade Unions, multi-
stakeholder grievance mechanisms, community grievance mechanisms, collective
bargaining agreements, and enterprise supply chain grievance mechanisms are all
examples of non-State-based processes that could enable remediation.
BOX 7. THE ROLE OF THE STATE TO ENSURE ACCESS TO EFFECTIVE REMEDY
As part of their duty to protect against enterprise-related human rights abuse, States
must take appropriate steps to ensure, through judicial administrative, legislative or
other appropriate means, that when such abuses occur within their territory and juris-
diction, those aected have access to eective remedy. The OECD Guidelines for MNEs
are not meant to establish legal concepts around liability, including among enterprises.
Domestic courts will use their own concepts and tests in considering accountability for
harm and appropriate remedy. However, if enterprises choose to operate in countries
where the State does not full its Duty to Protect, this does not absolve the enterprise
of its responsibility to provide remedy where an enterprise has caused or contributed to
an adverse impact.
24. OECD (2011) Chapter, IV, Para. 46.
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PROVIDE FOR OR COOPERATE IN REMEDIATION WHEN APPROPRIATE
Q52. What does it mean to “cooperate with legitimate remediation mechanisms”?
usee Section II, 6.2
If an enterprise may have caused or contributed to an adverse impact, the enterprise may engage
with any of the various systems under Section II, 6.2(a)-(c) of the Guidance to determine whether
it has caused or contributed to the adverse impact and to provide remedy in such cases.
However, if an enterprise has not caused or contributed to an adverse impact, but is rather directly
linked to the impact, the enterprise may still take a role in remediation, despite not having an
expectation to provide for remedy itself. For example, the enterprise may use its leverage, to the
extent practicable, with its business relationship to compel the business relationship to partici-
pate in processes to provide for remedy. Where relevant, the enterprise may provide information
which can facilitate investigations or dialogue.
Q53. In which circumstances are various processes to enable remediation
appropriate?
usee Section II, 6.2
The appropriate process to enable remediation will be dependent upon several factors including
legal obligations, stakeholder preferences, availability of mechanisms, the nature of the adverse
impact and where the adverse impact occurs (i.e. within the enterprise’s own operations or its
supply chain).
BOX 8. NATIONAL CONTACT POINTS OF THE OECD GUIDELINES FOR MNEs
The OECD Guidelines for MNEs have a built-in non-judicial grievance mechanism through
the National Contact Points (NCPs). NCPs are established by Adherents to the OECD
Investment Declaration. NCPs have the mandate of furthering the eectiveness of the
OECD Guidelines for MNEs by: undertaking promotional activities, handling enquiries
and contributing to the resolution of issues that arise relating to the implementation of
the OECD Guidelines for MNEs in specic instances.
*
Any individual or organisation can
bring a specic instance (case) against an enterprise to the NCP where the enterprise is
operating or based regarding the enterprise’s operations anywhere in the world. NCPs
facilitate access to consensual and non-adversarial procedures, such as conciliation or
mediation, to assist the parties in dealing with the issues. NCPs are required to issue
nal statements upon concluding the specic instance processes. NCPs can also make
recommendations based on the circumstances of the specic instance.
* Specic instances is the term used in the Guidelines to describe practical issues that may arise with
the implementation of the Guidelines.
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PROVIDE FOR OR COOPERATE IN REMEDIATION WHEN APPROPRIATE
5
FOR EXAMPLE
l In some cases, enterprises may have an obligation to participate in state-based
judicial grievance mechanisms or may be subject to criminal prosecution.
l Within an enterprise’s own operations, operational-level grievance mechanisms can
be an eective means of providing for such remediation when they meet the core
criteria of: legitimacy, accessibility, predictability, equitability, compatibility with
the OECD Guidelines for MNEs and transparency, and are based on dialogue and
engagement with a view to seeking agreed solutions.
25
l The options available may be more limited in relation to complaints that may be
raised in an enterprise’s supply chain (i.e. rather than its own operations). Enterprises
may establish or participate in processes that are feasible and appropriate to their
circumstances, whether that involves establishing their own supply chain grievance
mechanism, participating in a multi-stakeholder grievance mechanism or joining a
Global Framework Agreement.
Q54. What is the dierence between an early warning system and a process to
enable remediation?
usee Section II, 6.2
The objective of an early warning system is to identify risks (or actual impacts) related to an enter-
prise’s own activities or its business relationships.
5
FOR EXAMPLE, an enterprise might establish a worker hotline to provide an
opportunity for workers to raise concerns about issues aecting their rights, such as
health and safety conditions.
The objective of a process to enable remediation is to provide remedy to people who have been
harmed.
5
FOR EXAMPLE, a worker may raise a complaint against management for unfair ring.
The worker and the enterprise are brought together to determine an adequate remedy
(e.g. reinstatement, compensation, etc.).
A single system – such as a grievance mechanism – can operate as both an early warning system
and provide processes to enable remediation.
25. OECD (2011) Chapter, IV, Para. 46.
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
APPENDIX
RECOMMENDATION OF THE COUNCIL ON THE OECD DUE DILIGENCE
GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
As adopted on 30 May 2018
THE COUNCIL,
HAVING REGARD to Article 5 b) of the Convention on the Organisation for Economic
Co-operation and Development of 14 December 1960;
HAVING REGARD to the Declaration on International Investment and Multinational
Enterprises [C(76)99/FINAL], the Decision of the Council on the OECD Guidelines for Multinational
Enterprises [C(2000)96/FINAL] (hereafter the “Decision on the Guidelines”), the Convention
on Combating Bribery of Foreign Public Ocials in International Business Transactions, the
Recommendation of the Council on Due Diligence Guidance for Responsible Supply Chains of
Minerals from Conict-Aected and High-Risk Areas [C/MIN(2011)12/FINAL], the Recommendation
of the Council on the Policy Framework for Investment [C(2015)56/REV1], the Recommendation of
the Council on the OECD-FAO Guidance for Responsible Agricultural Supply Chains [C(2016)83],
the Recommendation of the Council on the Due Diligence Guidance for Meaningful Stakeholder
Engagement in the Extractive Sector [C(2016)100] and the Recommendation of the Council on
the OECD Due Diligence Guidance for Responsible Supply Chains in the Garment and Footwear
Sector [C(2017)63];
CONSIDERING that OECD Ministers encouraged the OECD to develop a set of general due
diligence guidelines that can be applied to any sector [C/MIN(2017)9/FINAL];
RECALLING that the common aim of governments recommending the observance of the
Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises (hereafter the “Guidelines”) is to promote responsible
business conduct;
RECALLING FURTHER that the Decision on the Guidelines provides that the Investment
Committee shall, in co-operation with National Contact Points, pursue a proactive agenda in col-
laboration with stakeholders to promote the eective observance by enterprises of the principles
and standards contained in the Guidelines with respect to particular products, regions, sectors or
industries;
CONSIDERING the eorts of the international community to promote responsible business
conduct globally in order to strengthen and harmonise the implementation of standards for
human rights, labour, the environment, and anti-corruption and to support a level playing eld
for business that takes into account their impacts on society and the environment;
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APPENDIX
RECOGNISING that responsible business conduct across all sectors of the economy is critical
to sustainable development;
NOTING that the Guidelines recommend that enterprises carry out risk-based due diligence
to identify, prevent and mitigate actual and potential adverse impacts related to disclosure,
human rights, employment and industrial relations, the environment, bribery and corruption, and
consumer interests in their own operations, supply chains and other business relationships;
RECOGNISING that governments, enterprises, trade unions, civil society organisations and
international organisations can draw on their respective competences and roles to promote and
support responsible business conduct, including in supply chains;
HAVING REGARD to the OECD Due Diligence Guidance for Responsible Business Conduct
[C(2018)42/ADD1] (hereafter “the Guidance”), that may be modied as appropriate by the
Investment Committee, in particular as due diligence practices evolve and become more eec-
tive in avoiding and addressing adverse impacts on society and the environment;
HAVING REGARD to the United Nations’ Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights
and the International Labour Organization’s Tripartite Declaration of Principles concerning
Multinational Enterprises and Social Policy which contain due diligence recommendations with
which this Guidance seeks to align;
RECOGNISING the valuable collaboration between the OECD and relevant intergovern-
mental organisations in the development and future implementation of the Guidance;
NOTING that due diligence is ongoing and responsive, involves multiple processes and
objectives, should aim to prevent adverse impacts on society and the environment in the rst
instance, and should be risk-based, appropriate to an enterprise’s circumstances, adapted to deal
with the limitations of working with business relationships, and informed by meaningful engage-
ment with stakeholders;
On the proposal of the Investment Committee;
I. RECOMMENDS that Members and non-Members adhering to this Recommendation
(hereafter the “Adherents”) and, where relevant, their National Contact Points to the
Guidelines (hereafter the “NCPs”), actively promote the use of the Guidance by enter-
prises operating in or from their territories with the aim of ensuring that they observe
internationally agreed standards of responsible business in order to prevent the adverse
impacts of their activities and contribute to sustainable development;
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APPENDIX
II. RECOMMENDS, in particular, that Adherents take measures to actively support
and monitor the adoption of the due diligence framework set out in the Guidance
according to which the enterprises operating in or from their territories should:
1. embed responsible business conduct into their policies and management systems;
2. identify and assess actual and potential adverse impacts associated with their
operations, products or services;
3. cease, prevent and mitigate adverse impacts;
4. track implementation and results;
5. communicate how impacts are addressed; and
6. provide for or cooperate in remediation when appropriate;
III. RECOMMENDS that Adherents and where relevant their NCPs, with the support
of the OECD Secretariat, ensure the widest possible dissemination of the Guidance
and its active use by enterprises, as well as promote the use of the Guidance as a
resource for stakeholders such as industry associations, trade unions, civil society
organisations, multi-stakeholder initiatives, and sector-initiatives, and regularly report
to the Investment Committee on any monitoring, dissemination and implementation
activities;
IV. INVITES Adherents and the Secretary-General to disseminate this Recommendation;
V. INVITES non-Adherents to take due account of and adhere to the present
Recommendation;
VI. INSTRUCTS the Investment Committee to monitor the implementation of the
Recommendation and to report to Council no later than ve years following its adop-
tion and as appropriate thereafter.
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95
Capobianco, Gillard and Bijelic (2015), “Competition law and responsible business conduct,
Background Note for the 2015 Global Forum on Responsible Business Conduct, OECD, Paris,
https://mneguidelines.oecd.org/global-forum/2015GFRBC-Competition-background-note.pdf.
ILO (2017), ILO Tripartite Declaration of Principles concerning Multinational Enterprises and Social
Policy, 5th Edition, www.ilo.org/empent/areas/mne-declaration/lang--en/index.htm.
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OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
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OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCTOECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
OECD DUE DILIGENCE GUIDANCE
FOR RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS CONDUCT
The OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises acknowledge and encourage
the positive contributions that business can make to economic, environmental
and social progress, and also recognise that business activities can result in
adverse impacts related to workers, human rights, the environment,
bribery, consumers and corporate governance.
This Guidance helps businesses to understand and implement
due diligence for responsible business conduct. It also seeks to promote a
common understanding on responsible business conduct
amongst governments and stakeholders.
https://mneguidelines.oecd.org/