Corporate accountability and regulation
Corporations are responsible and should be held accountable for the impact of their business activities on people, societies and the environment. A growing number of initiatives and standards try to stimulate corporate accountability, from corporate codes of conduct and certification schemes to the OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises and the United Nations Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights. SOMO evaluates the effectiveness of these initiatives by examining the degree to which they actually contribute to responsible corporate behaviour, corporate accountability, and access to remedy. Our conclusion – based on more than thirty years of research on corporate accountability – is that voluntary initiatives and guidelines fall short. Firm measures are needed to ensure that businesses respect human rights, labour rights, and the environment, and that victims of abuse obtain the remedy they deserve. For this reason SOMO advocates for binding enforceable regulations and laws, effective judicial and non-judicial grievance mechanisms, and a strengthened international legal framework to protect human rights in the context of business operations.
Overview of articles
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SOMO urges states to support environmental human rights defendersPosted in category:Published on:Statement
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Civil society request the UN to support the protection of the Colombian ‘páramo’Posted in category:Published on:Statement
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UN asked to intervene in the protection of the Santurbán páramoPosted in category:NewsPublished on:
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Dutch civil society organisations sound the alarm: Dutch Minister must save human rights treatyPosted in category:NewsPublished on:
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FIDH, SOMO and Asser Institute organise expert meeting on UN Treaty on Business and Human RightsPosted in category:NewsPublished on:
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World Bank refuses to listen to those affected by mining in ColombiaPosted in category:NewsPublished on:
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Brazil: organizations call for Vale to be delisted from the UN Global CompactPosted in category:NewsPublished on:
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Organizations ask United Nations to delist Vale from Global CompactPosted in category:Published on:Statement
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Providing remedy for victims of human rights violations in BrazilPosted in category:NewsPublished on:
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Unilever was negligent in protecting its own employees in KenyaPosted in category:Published on:Statement
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No VIP rights for multinationals: human rights and environment first!Posted in category:NewsPublished on:
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EU must lead in establishing binding instruments against corporate misconductPosted in category:Published on:Statement
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Dutch government increases attention for human rights in ColombiaPosted in category:NewsPublished on:
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Is the International Finance Corporation investing in a fossil free future?Posted in category:NewsPublished on:
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Civil society organizations urge fundamental reform at UNCITRAL’s ISDS discussionsPosted in category:Published on:Statement
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Effective enforcement is the ultimate litmus test for any human rights treatyPosted in category:Published on:Statement