Pillar I
Legal Obligations
Around the world, governments are turning voluntary “good practice” on human rights into legal obligations. These laws include: reporting requirements, building on the modern slavery reporting requirements of the prior decade; due diligence requirements, building on existing laws in France and Germany; and trade enforcement laws, such as forced labor import bans. They also aim to assure remedies for affected rightsholders. For more on remedy, see Pillar III. Additional laws require HRDD Reporting.
Nomogaia supports these efforts in two ways.
Companies are tasked to screen and “Scope” their human rights risks. Then they must conduct “In-Depth Assessment” where the in-scope risks require it. In-Depth Assessment will identify the remedial actions needed, partly through the implementation of “Meaningful Engagement” and effective “Grievance Mechanisms.” They are to be duly diligent across operations, portfolios and suppliers. Regulators require guidance to know how to evaluate whether company processes are ‘duly’ diligent. The oversight duty is significant.
01
Where risk profiles are elevated, regulators can require access to documentation that demonstrates how companies are evaluating their impacts on affected people. This is a significant gap in current corporate human rights reporting – regulators can address the systemic problem of companies linking risks to remedies without evaluating on-the-ground impacts and tailoring remedies to verified harms. Reporting requirements have been controversial, but they can be beneficial to everyone if they target reporting and tracking of actual impacts and remedies.
02