4th UN Forum on Business and Human Rights
Date
17 - 19 November 2015
Date: | 16-18 November 2015 |
Location: | Palais des Nations, Geneva, Switzerland Please enter via Pregny Gate Map |
Programme: |
Summary of discussions of the Forum |
Modalities of participation | |
Speakers: | Latest speaker list |
Twitter - follow live coverage: | @UNrightswire @UNrightsLIVE #bizhumanrights |
Contact: |
General inquiries: forumbhr@ohchr.org |
Watch video recordings: | UNTV |
Important update for Forum participants:
Due to very high registration numbers, participants should arrive early to pick up their access badge. The accreditation desk at Prégny Gate is now exceptionally open on Sunday 15 November from 14:00 to 17:00 and from 07:00 in the mornings of 16-18 November. Registered participants can collect their badge during these times:
- Sunday 15 November 14.00-17.00
- Monday 16 November 07:00-17:00
- Tuesday 17 November 07:00-17:00
- Wednesday 18 November 07:00-17:00
Participants with a badge are also advised to arrive early on 16-18 November, as queues at the entrance will be expected. For assistance, please contact: registrationforumbhr@ohchr.org
Address: Palais desNations (UN), Prégny Gate, 14 Avenue de la Paix
Bus Lines 8, 25, F, V, or Z (Stop: Appia) or Taxi to Prégny Gate
All participants must have a badge to enter the United Nations. Please bring your ID (passport or other national identification). Without this document you may be denied entry to the United Nations. For further info, please refer to the logistics note.
About the Forum
The United Nations Forum on Business and Human Rights is a space for representatives and practitioners from civil society, business, government, international organizations and affected stakeholders to take stock of challenges and discuss ways to move forward on putting into practice the Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights – a global standard for preventing and addressing adverse impacts on human rights linked to business activity. The Forum was established by the Human Rights Council, and is guided by the United Nations Working Group on Business and Human Rights. The third annual Forum, which was held in Geneva from 1 to 3 December 2014, attracted around 2,000 persons from over 100 countries. Videos of sessions at the 2014 Forum are available at UN Web TV.
Building on the previous events, the fourth annual Forum will focus on:
- Strengthening multi-stakeholder dialogue and engagement
- Discussing effective ways to measure and report on progress to implement the Guiding Principles
- Discussing national action plans to implement the Guiding Principles
- Exploring access to effective remedy
- Examining current practice of States and business enterprises and “unpacking” what implementation of the Guiding Principles means in concrete areas
Background
The relationship between business and human rights has become an issue that States and businesses worldwide cannot ignore. On one hand, businesses can help advance human rights, including by offering access to decent work and higher living standards. On the other, businesses can also hinder human rights, as underlined by recurring reports from around the world of unsafe working conditions, migrant worker exploitation, and damage to community environments.
Meanwhile, there is growing worldwide recognition of the human rights aspects of sustainable development and the role business can and should play in addressing global challenges such as climate change, poverty and inequality.
Learn more about the UN Forum on Business and Human Rights
Accordingly, the Human Rights Council in 2011 unanimously endorsed the Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights, and more and more States and businesses are taking real steps to put into practice its three pillars: the State duty to protect human rights, the corporate responsibility to respect human rights, and the right of victims to access an effective remedy. Important implementation challenges, however, remain.
The United Nations Human Rights Council, under paragraph 12 of its resolution 17/4, established the United Nations Forum on Business and Human Rights, under the guidance of the Working Group on Business and Human Rights, to serve as a key global platform for stakeholders to ”discuss trends and challenges in the implementation of the Guiding Principles and promote dialogue and cooperation on issues linked to business and human rights.”
Chairperson of the fourth Forum on Business and Human Rights
In paragraph 15 of Human Rights Council resolution 17/4, the Council requested the President of the Council to appoint for each session of the Forum, on the basis of regional rotation, and in consultation with regional groups, a chairperson of the Forum serving in his/her personal capacity. The chairperson is nominated by members and observers of the Council and shall be responsible for the preparation of a summary of the Forum discussions. The 2012, 2013 and 2014 Fora were chaired by Mr. John Ruggie (USA), Mr. Makarim Wibisono (Indonesia), and Mr. Mo Ibrahim (Sudan) respectively.
Ms. Diana Chavez (Mexico) will serve as chairperson of the 2015 Forum.
Registration and logistics
Important update for Forum participants:
Due to very high registration numbers, participants should arrive early to pick up their access badge. The accreditation desk at Prégny Gate is now exceptionally open on Sunday 15 November from 14:00 to 17:00 and from 07:00 in the mornings of 16-18 November. Registered participants can collect their badge during these times:
- Sunday 15 November 14.00-17.00
- Monday 16 November 07:00-17:00
- Tuesday 17 November 07:00-17:00
- Wednesday 18 November 07:00-17:00
Participants with a badge are also advised to arrive early on 16-18 November, as queues at the entrance will be expected. For assistance, please contact: registrationforumbhr@ohchr.org
Address: Palais desNations (UN), Prégny Gate, 14 Avenue de la Paix
Bus Lines 8, 25, F, V, or Z (Stop: Appia) or Taxi to Prégny Gate
All participants must have a badge to enter the United Nations. Please bring your ID (passport or other national identification). Without this document you may be denied entry to the United Nations. For further info, please refer to the logistics note.
- Registration
- Practical information for participants
- Map
- Hotel information I-II
Stands
To further facilitate informal exchanges and promote dialogue, a public space — or “marketplace” — will be made available to participants in conjunction with the meeting rooms. Participating organizations wishing to use this opportunity to showcase information, tools and materials to other participants during the three days of the Forum may register for allocation of space, subject to availability.
Contact: forumbhr@ohchr.org and registrationforumbhr@ohchr.org.
Programme and documentation
- Full programme
- Guidance for session organizers and moderators
- Speaker biographies
- Quick view programme
- Modalities of participation
- 2015 Forum summary report (Advance edited version)
Background documents, submissions and statements
Background documents and submissions
- Business Community Affirms that Respect for Human Rights is a Key Contribution to Sustainable Development Statement in Support of UN Guiding Principles and Sustainable Development Goals
- UN FORUM SERIES – Tracking progress in business and human rights
- Blog post by Margaret Jungk, Chairperson of the UN Working Group on Business and Human Rights -Implementing the Guiding Principles: The Challenge of Measurement
- Blog post by Margaret Jungk, Chair of UN Working Group on Business and Human Rights, Mauricio Lazala, Deputy Director of Business and Human Rights Resource Centre, and Mark Hodge, Executive Director of Global Business Initiative on Human Rights - Three is the magic number (Multi-stakeholder action & the interplay of "Protect, Respect and Remedy")
- Whistle blowing and human rights - comment by Arnaud Poitevin
- Business and Human Rights Indicators to Measure the Corporate Responsibility to Respect: Challenges and Opportunities, Damiano De Felice , Access to Medicine Foundation
- Human Rights and the Business of Fracking: Applying the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights to Hydraulic Fracturing - Submission by The Center for Human Rights and Environment (CHRE/CEDHA)
- Kawas v. Honduras – Protecting Environmental Defenders - Submitted by Lauri R. Tanner
Background documents for session on "Multi-stakeholder engagement across all three pillars (case studies)", 16 and 18 November
- Malawi 2020 Tea Revitalisation programme - Working towards a competitive tea industry with living wages & living incomes (16 November, 15:00-16:20, Room XX)
- Thilawa Special Economic Zone - Myanmar (16 November, 15:00-16:20, Room XX)
- The Kingsland Case - Cambodia (18 November, 15:00-16:20, Room XX)
- The Fair Food Program Case - United States (18 November, 15:00-16:20, Room XX)
Statements made at the Forum
- Video statement by the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Ra'ad Al Hussein, opening plenary, 17 November
- Remarks by Diana Chávez, Chairperson of the 2015 Forum, opening plenary, 17 November
- Remarks by Mukhtar Tileuberdi, Vice President of the Human Rights Council, opening plenary, 17 November
- Remarks by Margaret Jungk, Chairperson of the UN Working Group on Business and Human Rights, Opening plenary, 17 November
- Remarks by Ryan Brightwell, BankTrack, Session on access to remedy in the financial sector, 16 November
- Remarks by Margaret Jungk, Chairperson of the UN Working Group on Business and Human Rights, Closing plenary, 18 November
- Remarks by Lise Kingo, Executive Director of the UN Global Compact, Closing plenary, 18 November
- Remarks by Tone Skogen, State Secretary at Norway's Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Closing plenary, 18 November
- Remarks by Mark Hodge, Executive Director at the Global Business Initiative on Human Rights, Closing plenary, 18 November
- Remarks by Debbie Stothard, Secretary General of FIDH and Coordinator of Altsean-Burma, Closing plenary, 18 November
- Remarks by Mthunzi Mdwaba, Chairman of the IOE CSR & Business and Human Rights Policy Working Group, Closing plenary, 18 November
- Statement Indigenous Caucus, Closing Plenary, 18 November - English | Spanish
Summaries of parallel sessions led by external organisations (as received)
- Access to remedy and the role of national human rights institutions
- Beyond auditing: Effective ways to address human rights violations in the garment supply chain
- Community of Practice of dialogue facilitators - Practitioners' exchange
- Cooperation through education, research and dialogue: The role of academic institutions as multipliers of the global business and human rights agenda
- Effective company-level grievance mechanisms: Multi-stakeholder perspectives and examples from practice
- Human rights due diligence in law and practice
- Innovative approaches in company-community dispute resolution in complex environments
- Land, corruption and human rights: A roundtable discussion on the human rights implications of large-scale land investments
- Launch of the Ranking Digital Rights 2015 Corporate Accountability Index
- National action plans on business and human rights: Global perspectives
- Overcoming challenges of company-community relations in complex environments
- Promises and pitfalls of non-judicial grievance mechanisms
- Respecting children’s rights: Tools and approaches to fight child labour
- The role of corporate reporting in the implementation of the UN Guiding Principles on Human Rights
- Unpacking the Guiding Principles in the context of investment treaty arbitration
- Whistleblowers protection in the context of the UN Guiding Principles
- Working together to promote due diligence and protect workers’ rights during recruitment
Media
For all media accreditation requests, please refer to the information from the United Nations Office in Geneva (UNOG) Press and External Relations Section.