30 June to 1 July 2010 - OECD Conference Centre, Paris
In April 2010, governments adhering to the Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises agreed on the Terms of Reference for an Update to the OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises. The update aims to ensure their continued role as a leading international instrument for the promotion of responsible business conduct. They also agreed that work on the update would start on the occasion of the 2010 Roundtable.
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This Roundtable brought together representatives from governments, business, labour, NGOs, international organisations, non-adhering governments and academia to focus on ways of clarifying or providing further guidance on the application of the Guidelines in 3 areas as outlined in the Terms of Reference for an Update to the OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises:
Preliminary programme | français
Transition to a low-carbon economy - public goals and corporate practices, OECD
The corporate responsibility to respect human rights in the supply chain, Professor John Ruggie, Special Representative of the UN Secretary General
Discussion Paper on Updating the OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises, Professor John Ruggie, Special Representative of the UN Secretary General
Supply Chains and the OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises, Business for Social Responsibility (BSR)
Session 1 – Supply Chains
Corporate tools and practices for managing supply chain risks: a perspective from China - Scott Chang, BSR China
Levi Strauss & Co: Social and environmental sustainability in the supply chain - Manuel Baigorri
Supply chain social and environmental responsibility at Hewlett-Packard - Karl Daumueller
The Global Social Compliance Programme – Véronique Buhot
Possible implications for the update of the Guidelines - Cody Sisco, BSR
Session 2 – Human Rights
Keynote remarks by, John Morrison, Institute for Human Rights and Business
Keynote remarks by Matthew Smith, EarthRights International, Thailand
Business and Human Rights - Clifford Henry, USCIB
Anglo American and Human Rights - Hugh Elliott
Session 3 – Climate Change
Transition to a low-carbon economy: public goals and corporate practices - Céline Kauffmann and Cristine Tébar Less, OECD
Corporate disclosure of climate change related information – Paul Simpson, Carbon Disclosure Project
Emerging business practices to reduce GHG emissions – Jerome Lavigne-Delville, UN Global Compact
Engaging with suppliers - Sustainable value chains and consumption, GHG Protocol – Philip Reuchlin. WBCSD
Setting environmental goals for supply chains - Cody Sisco, BSR
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