Snapshot co-organized by the Working Group on Business and Human Rights, Oxfam, Women on Farms Project (South Africa) and Ethical Trading Initiative (ETI)This snapshot session focuses on concrete experiences and learnings of how to ensure meaningful rightsholder engagement in Human rights due diligence (HRDD) processes. HRDD is an important avenue to change the way companies interact with rightsholders. At the European level, CSRD and CS3D, require companies to conduct “meaningful stakeholder engagement” as part of the process. Years of holding companies to account for human rights abuses in their food supply chains, have taught ETI, Oxfam and Women on Farms Project that this sounds simple and straightforward, but it isn’t.
Colette Solomon, director of Women on Farms Project, works with women farm workers and dwellers in the Western and Northern Cape in South Africa. These women work on farms producing grapes and wines that are sold in European supermarkets, and during their work they are exposed to human rights abuses, most notably exposure to pesticide spraying. Colette will share her first-hand experience of the challenges that women farm workers experience when trying to hold companies to account for harms suffered and why/how effective human rights due diligence can potentially be a game-changer for them.
To ensure genuine interaction and dialogue, companies will be required to significantly shift how they structure and conduct engagement. It will involve building or deepening relationships and identifying opportunities for continuous engagement at each step of due diligence. Companies will need to be more transparent with affected stakeholders, reduce power imbalances, and engage in good faith with critical voices who raise concerns.
Key objectives:The objective of this session is to increase our joint understanding of the needs of rightsholders and how these can be addressed by companies through their human rights due diligence processes.
We will unpack the key principles underlying meaningful stakeholder engagement. This will serve as the basis for more elaborated recommendations Oxfam, ETI and partners are developing for companies on this key issue in human rights due diligence.
Background documents: