OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises – Translations
The OECD Guidelines are currently available in Czech, English, Polish, Russian, Slovak, and Slovenian.
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The OECD Guidelines are currently available in Czech, English, Polish, Russian, Slovak, and Slovenian.
The UNGPs are currently available in English, Russian, and Serbian.
With this guide, FIDH seeks to provide a practical tool for victims and their representatives, NGOs, and other civil society groups, including unions, social movements, and activists, to seek justice and obtain reparation for victims of human rights abuses involving multinational corporations. The guide explores the different avenues available to victims, including judicial and non-judicial recourse mechanisms. It focuses primarily on violations committed by or with the involvement of transnational corporations, their subsidiaries, or their commercial partners in third countries where they operate.
This Human Rights and Business Country Guide contains information regarding the potential and actual human rights impacts of businesses. The information in this Guide is intended to help companies respect human rights and contribute to development in their own operations and those of their suppliers and business partners.
This Human Rights and Business Country Guide contains information regarding the potential and actual human rights impacts of businesses. The information in this Guide is intended to help companies respect human rights and contribute to development in their own operations and those of their suppliers and business partners.
The Business & Human Rights Resource Centre analysed the human rights policies and performance of 30 extractives companies in Eastern Europe and Central Asia, with a focus on Armenia, Georgia, and Kazakhstan. In doing so, we aimed to draw attention to the major human rights risks and impacts within the region, as well as address the lack of information around business activities.
This Human Rights and Business Country Guide contains information regarding the potential and actual human rights impacts of businesses. The information in this Guide is intended to help companies respect human rights and contribute to development in their own operations and those of their suppliers and business partners.
The Belgrade Centre for Human Rights, a civil society organisation in Serbia, commenced the drafting of a national baseline assessment in January 2016. It is intended to serve as basis for furthering national debate on developing a NAP and the uptake of the UN Guiding Principles in Serbia more generally.
Analysis of Ukraine’s National Action Plan on Business and Human Rights, courtesy of the Danish Institute for Human Rights.
Analysis of Slovenia’s National Action Plan on Business and Human Rights, courtesy of the Danish Institute for Human Rights.