Modern slavery and the Global Reporting Initiative - A bridge too far?

Date

2023

Authors

Burritt, Roger
Christ, Katherine Leanne

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Abstract

As the Global Reporting Initiative currently provides the most widely used set of voluntary sustainability reporting standards, the question arises as to the extent to which the Initiative's multi-stakeholder governance is helping towards ending modern slavery in line with the United Nations Sustainable Development Goal 8. Stakeholder theory and examination of the Initiative's sustainability standards are used, to examine the issue. Evidence from the Initiative's set of universal, topic and sector standards reveals that, while forced and child labour are identified as granular material topics for sustainability reporting, the broader concept of modern slavery has not been recognised as a required material theme for disclosure. One recent exception is voluntary publication of three new sector standards, where the modern slavery term appears to be introduced as a symbolic rather than a substantive notion. Main contributions from the research relate to, first, providing a critique of the multi-stakeholder foundations for governance as used by the Initiative; second, examination of the results of the Initiative's standard setting process in terms of its standards and their incorporation of modern slavery, from a multi-stakeholder governance perspective with the hope of improving governance in the future.

Description

Keywords

Global Reporting Initiative, GRI Standards, management stakeholder theory, modern slavery

Citation

Source

Business Strategy and Development

Type

Journal article

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

Open Access

License Rights

Creative Commons AttributionNonCommercial-NoDerivs License

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