In the new report, published by Friends of the Earth, examines EU's double agenda on globalisation regarding corporate rights and human rights. The European Union and its Member States are important actors when it comes to shaping globalisation. This briefing explores the double role the EU plays in these processes: spinning a web of treaties that give corporations extraordinary powers while hindering efforts to hold these very same companies accountable. This double agenda is exemplified by the EU’s actions in two areas: its reluctance to support binding and enforceable rights for citizens through an UN Treaty on Business and Human Rights, and at the same time expanding and entrenching a system of legally binding and enforceable investor rights and privileges that grants corporations power over governments and communities. The new report concludes that given the fundamental flaws of the investor rights system and the strong need for the UN Treaty, it is high time for the EU to review its positions on these issues and start addressing and reversing the inequities globalisation is producing.
November 5, 2018 | Friends of the Earth
The EU’s double agenda on globalisation: Corporate rights vs people’s rights
The last decades of globalisation have seen corporations expanding across the globe in search for new markets, cheaper labour and lower environmental standards. As economies become more and more intertwined, companies increasingly operate outside their country of origin, often making use of factories and offices in multiple countries in order to assemble a single product.
While trade and investment agreements provide corporations withextraordinary rights that enable them to operate across the globe, companies do not have any binding international obligations regulating their conduct. Communities and workers who are harmed by their operations do not have recourse to an international mechanism through which to hold them accountable. Concurrently, people who resist large-scale projects, such as those carried out by the extractive industry, are increasingly being intimidated, harassed and even killed. In 2017, nearly four human rights and environmental defenders were killed per week, with companies and state security forces often working closely together.
The European Union and its Member States are some of the most important actors when it comes to shaping globalisation. This briefing explores the double role the EU plays in this process: spinning a web of treaties that give corporations extraordinary powers while hindering efforts to hold these very same companies accountable. This double agenda is exemplified by the EU’s actions in two areas: its reluctance to support binding and enforceable rights for citizens through an UN Treaty on Business and Human Rights, while at the same time expanding and entrenching a system of legally binding and enforceable investor rights and privileges that grants corporations extraordinary power over governments and communities.
Download the full report here (pdf, 668 KB).