Enabling supply chain transparency to combat forced labor and modern slavery (Part 1): The evolving legal frameworks

Bertrand Maltaverne
Procurement Tidbits
2 min readApr 11, 2022
Photo by Zeyn Afuang on Unsplash

Spend Matters begins a new series looking into how a combination of process and technology can help root out and combat forced labor and modern slavery in global supply chains. We’ll look at understanding and addressing the regulatory environment, the role technology can play in bringing issues to the fore, and the key solution vendors enabling this transparency. Today we begin with the evolving regulatory frameworks within which we must work.

June 2022: the US “Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act” (UFLPA) becomes effective. Importers must demonstrate “by establishing, with clear and convincing evidence” that the imports are not the product of forced labor.

January 2023: the German supply chain Act “Lieferkettensorgfaltspflichtengesetz” (English: “Act on Corporate Due Diligence Obligations for the Prevention of Human Rights Violations in Supply Chains”) will come into effect. Companies with more than 3,000 employees must ensure that their supply chain is free of human rights violations.

Procurement is staring down a major ethical obstacle in global supply chains, and global governments are upping their scrutiny of how well — and how quickly — organizations are able to address the challenge. The issue in focus is human rights — specifically, forced labor/modern slavery within global supply chains.

The two laws referenced above are only the latest in a series of legislative decrees that apply to human rights and supply chains. They are not the first ones and won’t be the last either. They illustrate a global movement to get supply chains in order. This movement is fueled by governments creating regulations that require companies to look at what they produce, buy and source, even (and especially) when goods are coming from overseas.

Part of the headache for procurement and supply chain professionals is that, even if all these laws try to tackle the same issue, they do it differently. Scope of application, definitions, enforcement/control means, penalties, etc. vary from one country to another. However, they all represent the same challenges at the core: supply chain transparency and compliance requirements.

For these reasons, our series will explore this critical topic to provide contextual details: the legal frameworks in place and important upcoming evolutions. We will then, in part 2, look at what it means for procurement professionals regarding challenges and approaches. We will also deep dive in part 3 into enabling and supporting procurement technologies available on the market.

Read the complete article: https://spendmatters.com

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