1. Basic ideas of CSR
CSR means the following: “For a business enterprise to fulfill its
accountability to each stakeholder, to demonstrate its raison d’etre
as a public institution in its practices of protecting human rights,
conserving the environment, securing employment, guaranteeing the quality
of working conditions and the working environment, contributing to the community,
and contributing to cultural activities, based on rules of conduct specific
to each of these areas, and to contribute to the formation of rules for social
justice.”
This basic idea of CSR is directly linked to corporate management itself
and in particular to the relations between a corporation and its stakeholders.
The specific contents of CSR cannot be decided unilaterally by corporate
management, but should be established through a dialogue with each stakeholder.
2. Emphasis on the areas of employment, labor and human rights
Trade unions should actively encourage corporations to clarify CSR in the
areas of employment and labor issues.
In particular, trade unions should emphasize, as a matter of course, the
prohibition and prevention of social discrimination and various forms of
harassment, as well as equal treatment going beyond differences in forms
of employment and work arrangements, and a balancing of working, family and
community life.
* International standards in the areas of employment and labor issues include
the following:
(1) ILO core labor standards
a. Basic labor rights (freedom of association,
right to organize, right to collective bargaining)
b. Prohibition of forced labor
c. Prohibition of child labor
d. Equal pay for work of equal value
(2) OECD Guideline for Multinational
Corporations
(3) Corporate Rules of
Conduct developed by ICFTU/APRO
- Basic items in the areas of employment
and labor issues (See the table in the Appendix.)
3. The importance of labor-management consultations
CSR on issues in the areas of employment and labor should be preceded by
labor-management consultations.
The criteria for evaluating corporate practice on CSR from the standpoint
of trade unions should rest not only on the declared intent of the corporation,
but on whether it pledges to hold dialogue with the union or labor-management
talks in implementing its declaration, and whether the corporation has created
a follow-up mechanism.
4. The importance of social and policy approaches
In order to lead society as a whole toward a path of desirable competition,
we must promote, in addition to the social responsibility of individual corporations,
social and policy approaches that include rules for fair competition, labor
standards and environmental standards. |