Photo: SOMO

Many countries are adopting or considering mandatory human rights due diligence legislation. In April 2020, the EU Commissioner for Justice committed to an EU-wide initiative on corporate due diligence, to be presented in 2021.

Photo: SOMO

These developments represent solid steps in the right direction. However, progress towards this type of legislation is facing a significant reaction, often on the basis of false assumptions and misleading arguments rather than facts and evidence.

In a new report, the European Coalition for Corporate Justice (ECCJ) aims to counter those flawed or inaccurate claims and to prevent them from dominating the public and political debate around this topic. Its goal is to serve as a useful resource for policymakers, civil society organisations, trade unions and activists to rebut those arguments and to bring into the conversation the interests of people and nature along global value chains, as well as the point of view of responsible businesses, currently facing unfair disadvantages as competitors profit from lower costs gained through exploitation and disregard for human rights and the environment.

ECCJ is a partner of SOMO in the Mind the Gap consortium, which aims to increase respect for human rights and achieving justice and remedy for individuals and communities whose lives and livelihoods have been adversely affected by multinational corporations.