从商业和人权角度看短食品供应链

Mirta Alessandrini, Nadia Bernaz, Olena Uvarova
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摘要

2024 年 5 月,欧盟通过了《企业可持续性尽职调查指令》3 。该指令要求公司开展人权和环境尽职调查程序,以预防、减轻和解决其自身、子公司及其全球活动链中可能或实际产生的负面人权和环境影响。该指令是继 2011 年联合国人权理事会通过《联合国工商业与人权指导原则》之后,工商业与人权领域的最新进展。这些指导原则不具约束力,但已激励世界各地的政府和公司政策朝着加强企业问责制的方向迈进。这种企业与人权方法优先考虑企业问责制,并以国际人权法为基础,从而超越了企业自愿承担的社会责任。该指令的重点是大型企业(员工人数超过 1000 人,年营业额不低于 4.5 亿欧元),同时强调所有企业都有责任尊重人权,因为人权具有普遍性、不可分割性、相互依存性和相互关联性。因此,也鼓励价值链上的小公司按照人权--包括经济和社会权利--和环境国际标准,以及更广泛的《企业人权手册》方法,采取负责任的行为。
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Short food supply chains through a business and human rights lens

In May 2024, the EU adopted the Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive3. The directive requires companies to carry out a human rights and environmental due diligence process to prevent, mitigate and address their own potential or actual adverse human rights and environmental impacts, as well as those of their subsidiaries and those arising in their global chains of activities. The directive is the latest development in BHR, following the adoption in 2011 by the United Nations Human Rights Council of the United Nations Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights. These guiding principles are non-binding but have inspired government and company policies around the world to move towards more corporate accountability. This BHR approach prioritizes corporate accountability and is shaped by international human rights law, thus going beyond voluntary corporate social responsibility.

The directive introduces ‘responsible business conduct’ as an additional component of sustainability. While focusing on very large companies (with more than 1,000 employees and a minimum annual turnover of €450 million), the directive emphasizes that all businesses have the responsibility to respect human rights, which are universal, indivisible, interdependent and interrelated. Therefore, smaller companies along the value chain are also encouraged to have responsible conduct, in line with human rights — including economic and social rights — and environmental international standards, and more broadly with the BHR approach.

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