4.1 Article

Corporate Responsibility and Accountability for Modern Forms of Slavery

Journal

JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL JUSTICE
Volume 14, Issue 2, Pages 453-468

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/jicj/mqw023

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Across the globe, workers are at risk of being placed into forced labour, trafficked or enslaved at various points including during recruitment, hiring and employment. By engaging in the production, purchase and sale of goods produced by forced or trafficked labourers, businesses bear responsibility for the impact of human rights on their supply chains. Although many companies are taking positive steps to address this risk, others lag behind. Positive business initiatives seem largely to be motivated by pressure from regulators, consumers or investors, rather than the threat of criminal law enforcement. In most countries, modern forms of slavery are criminalized, but few prosecutions have occurred at the national level. Modern forms of slavery persist and businesses continue to be involved in the perpetration of such harms. In light of this, this article will argue that despite promising business and government responses to addressing modern forms of slavery in supply chains, gaps in protection, at both the domestic and international levels, may contribute to the persistence of these offences. The article will first detail the ways international criminal law and the corporate responsibility to respect human rights could shape companies' responses. It will then examine current approaches to addressing modern forms of slavery as well as gaps in protection associated with voluntary company actions, company efforts in response to regulatory requirements and government led remedial measures. The conclusion will finally argue that, in light of the continued persistence of modern forms of slavery, which exist despite a plethora of voluntary initiatives and mandatory laws and regulations at the domestic level, more avenues of accountability and increased enforcement at all levels, including internationally, are needed to end this scourge.

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