Stockholm university

Research project Corporate accountability in global supply chains?

Over the past decade, the EU and its member states have taken a pioneering role in extending binding environmental and social standards to companies’ global supply chains. Our project seeks to understand under what conditions such laws contribute to improve the human rights and environmental situation on the ground. 

Corporate accountability in global supply chains? The effectiveness of human rights and environmental due diligence regulations


The European Union (EU), as the largest trading bloc in the world, imports large quantities of products from countries of the Global South each year. It is not uncommon for these products to be associated with serious violations of human rights and environmental degradation, such as child labor, destruction of tropical forests, land rights violations and environmental pollution. The risk is particularly heightened when companies operate in countries with poor governance and repression of advocacy groups. 

Since the 1990s, many well-known companies have developed and used various voluntary sustainability standards. However, there is now a growing criticism, particularly in civil society and politics, but also in the corporate sector, that voluntary corporate initiatives alone are insufficient to ensure sustainable global trade. In recent years, European states have therefore enacted laws prohibiting the import of products that have serious adverse impacts on human rights and the environment. These regulations enable states to hold corporations accountable for serious problems arising in the production process.

Human rights and environmental due diligence laws have been highlighted as a potentially effective tool for states to regulate global trade. These laws build on the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights and the OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises. They require companies to implement a due diligence process to identify, assess, and manage their risks and negative impacts on human rights and the environment.

Countries like France, Norway and Germany have already enacted laws, and the EU has passed supply chain regulations based on a human rights and environmental due diligence approach (e.g., the European Union Deforestation Regulation and the Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive). As a result, all enterprises operating in EU markets will soon need to comply with these requirements. Due diligence laws have been hailed as a milestone in promoting more sustainable global trade. Non-compliant companies now face lawsuits, fines, and reputational damage, driven by civil society campaigns, state supervision and investor pressures. However, the effectiveness of newly adopted laws and policies can also be undermined by practices such as symbolic compliance and a tactical rearrangement of supply chains by companies or by weak enforceability measures. Yet, there is little research on the practical consequences of these law in terms of enhancing corporate accountability across borders. 

Against this background, the project asks: 

  1. To what extent and how do companies comply with HREDD regulations?
  2. What are the patterns of public-private interaction, and how do these interactions influence implementation processes? 
  3. How do different accountability mechanisms embodied in public policies operate, and what are their consequences for the effectiveness of HREDD regulations?
  4. To what extent do supply chain characteristics and domestic context conditions in producing sites explain variation in the effectiveness of HREDD regulations?

To address these questions, the project employs a mixed-methods design, combining document analysis, semi-structured interviews, comparative case studies, network analysis, and survey methods. Altogether, the project enables a better understanding of how states can govern complex global supply chains more effectively. 

 

Project description

This project analyzes to what extent and under what circumstances HREDD laws actually contributes to enhance corporate accountability across borders. To this end, we will draw on theories on public-private interactions; accountability; business and human rights; and supply chain governance. 

Empirically, the project focuses on the four HREDD regulations that have entered into force to date: the French Duty of Vigilance law (2017), the German Supply Chain Due Diligence law (2021), the Norwegian Transparency Act (2021), and the EU Deforestation-free Regulation (2022). We study the implementation processes in two high-risk sectors: agri-food and extractive industries. 

Taken together, this project will advance the research frontier in three ways. First, while previous research has focused on private governance, this project examines how private and public governance interact in the context of the new supply chain laws. Specifically, we investigate how private governance tools, such as corporate grievance mechanisms, change in response to the HREDD regulations. 

Second, while accountability has mainly been studied at the domestic and global level, this project theorizes accountability dynamics in the realm of global supply chains. The theory focuses on the role of civil society organizations and transnational networks in shaping the effective implementation of HREDD laws. Specifically, we study how civil society organizations can effectively generate and disseminate knowledge about the real-world impacts of corporate practices and hold companies accountable.

Third, while existing research primarily relies on single-case studies, this project carries out comparative case studies in different supply chains and exporting countries for explaining variance in the effectiveness of HREDD regulations. We analyze how domestic context conditions, such as the strength of civil society organizations and state capacity facilitate the use of different accountability mechanisms. 

For studying the effectiveness of new supply chain regulations, we will analyze and compare the compliance of companies with human rights and environmental due diligence obligations, the processes and outcomes of different accountability dynamics (e.g., legal, supervisory, reputational, market accountability) and the question to what extent access to remedy and remediation is provided for improving the human rights and environmental situation on the ground.  

Find brief information on "Denna sida på svenska". 

Project members

Project managers

Maria-Therese Gustafsson

Senior lecturer, Associate professor

Department of Political Science
Porträttbild av Maria-Therese Gustafsson.

Almut Schilling-Vacaflor

Professor

Friedrich-Alexander-University of Erlangen-Nürnberg
Almut Schilling-Vacaflor Photo: Unknown

Members

Anna Frohn-Pedersen

Postdoc

Friedrich-Alexander-University of Erlangen-Nürnberg
Anna Frohn-Pedersen Foto: Falk Weiß

Johanna Coenen

Postdoc

Department of Political Science
Profile picture Johanna Coenen

Meaghan Gordon

Forskningsassistent

Department of Political Science

Publications

News

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