GRI 203 Indirect economic impacts Agrandir l'image

GRI 409 Forced or compulsory labour

ADSR90522

Comments on the above GRI disclosure

 Warning !

The reproduction and distribution of materials produced by GRI for information and/or use in preparing a sustainability report may not be reproduced, stored, translated, or transferred in any form or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopied, recorded, or otherwise) for any other purpose without prior written permission from GRI

Plus de détails

CHF 0,00

Demande de contact

En savoir plus

Forced or compulsory labor exists globally in a variety of forms. The most extreme examples are slave labor and bonded labor, but debts can also be used as a means of maintaining workers in a state of forced labor. Indicators of forced labor can also include withholding identity papers, requiring compulsory deposits, and compelling workers, under threat of firing, to work extra hours to which they have not previously agreed.

Eliminating forced labor remains an important challenge. Forced labor is not only a serious violation of a fundamental human right, it also perpetuates poverty and is a hindrance to economic and human development.5

The presence and effective implementation of policies for eliminating all forms of forced or compulsory labor are a basic expectation of socially responsible conduct. Organizations with multinational operations are required by law in some countries to provide information on their efforts to eradicate forced labor in their supply chains.

 

Fiche technique

Pays Canada atlanthique, Autres Pays anglophones, Autres Pays francophones, Austrie, France - PACA, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes & Bourgogne-Franche-Comté, France : Sud-Ouest, Île-de-France, France: Nord de la France
Secteur Tous
Domaines d'intervention Responsabilité sociétale
Intervention Conseil
Satisfaction client
Qualification professionnelle
Empreinte carbone
Prix
Langue Anglais