Eli Bukspan | CSR - Company: Human rights and peace

Eli Bukspan | CSR - Company: Human rights and peace

Well, good morning. First, this talk is not going to be in Spanish, it will be a practical but a bit academic. It’s the last one before lunch, so I hope that you still be awake during this session.
 
Anyhow, I’m very honored to take part in this important conference, and thank you for inviting me. I’m excited to be here since this conference brings together and integrates the diverse and insightful minds to discuss highly important and timely topics. In addition, it is also, it has a unique meaning for me.
 
First, I’m excited to be here for the first time in this important area of the world. Coming all the way from close to Jerusalem to a friendly country, which only recently moved its Embassy to that city, a place with historical significance to many.
 
Secondly, because I feel connected to CUMIPAZ’s theme of creating an international space for dialogue and integration of peace, of sustainable development and the happiness of the integral human being and of the nations.
 
This theme is specifically promising with regards to the relatively new Corporate Social Responsibility Session theme and with the role of corporations as universal and dominant institutions that could play a meaningful role in providing help for humans and human organizations across the globe.
 
(Oh sorry. Great). This position of corporations in the current era are evident in the statement of professor Aharon Barak, the former president of the Supreme Court of Israel, who said in one of his important decision and I site: “In modern society the corporation is the main basis of human activity. There are countries that have more corporations than people.” As an anecdote in Hebrew (the language I speak daily), the word ‘company’ [Hebrew pronunciation] and ‘society’ [Hebrew pronunciation] as well, is the same word and this is exactly the essence of my discussion with you today.
 
So first, let me do something I neglected to do: Say shalom, which is ‘hello’ as well as ‘peace’ in Hebrew to all and introduce myself: My name is Eli Bukspan and I serve a singular lecturer in the Law School at the Interdisciplinary Center in Herzliya, Israel.
 
I’m speaking today based on my ***, which are closer related to the theme of this CSR day. First wearing my academicate, I’m researching and teaching corporate law and contract law: The two main legal issues and areas that are regulated in the business sector. We’re in the second ** and perhaps that more practical ** I am a member of the public committee, overseeing the CSR index at the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange, Maala and the chair of the Ethics subcommittee.
  
CSR is a growing phenomenon among Israeli business in Maala: a nonprofit CSR standard setting organizations, helps to further underpin* and accelerates this process. Founded in 1998, Maala is producing an annual index, which runs publicly traded as well as privately held Israeli companies based on CSR criteria. The Index criteria includes ethical aspects of business processes, environmental impact, responsible **, work relations, health and balance, corporate governance, social environmental management and reporting social involvement of employees, community contribution, and diversity and inclusion.
 
Lastly, wearing my third **: I’m a chair of the Israeli Class Action Funding fund. A highly unique fund that deals with one of the most promising legal practices in my view, that helps to enforce and improve social responsibility through the corporate and business sectors.
 
Class actions are very common in the U.S. and Israel, but not very common in Latin America. So, I’ll be more than happy to share with you my observations about this practice and hopefully contribute a bit to the efforts to adopt class action suits in this important part of the world as well.
 
I’d like to begin by sharing my own experience and observations. As a legal scholar I can attest the 25 years ago when I completed my doctorate studies at Harvard Law School, I was deeply intrigued with the framework of law   and economic structure of corporate law. However, today where the social and economic environment around us has deeply changed, no doubt that this framework is insufficient to explain what corporate law is all about. Indeed, though corporations and corporate law are considered to be the main area of private law, traditionally dominated by business and commercial principles, the modern era shows the rise of social and ethical issues in corporate law due to the growing social and public change experience with the corporations.
 
This is true also with regards to the issue of human rights in the corporate sector. Although human rights are usually viewed as part of public law with the goal of achieving effective protection to individuals from any violation of the elemental liberties done by governments, there is a growing aspect that corporations also have a very important role to play with the protection of human rights.
 
This conclusion is reinforced by the fact that 500 globally corporations control about 70 percent of world trade, and each year approximately three million new corporations are registered. The past few decades showed an increase in the privatization of government function. Private corporations have increasingly obtain state-like impact and some private entities today such as Google, Amazon and Apple are larger and more powerful than some countries themselves; and potentially endanger our human rights many of our privacy and autonomy no less than States. These companies, for example, have far more information about U.S. citizens than does the FBI, but far fewer restrictions on how to use it.
 
The observations about the growing influence of corporations can also be illustrated by the 2011 very famous Forbes magazine cover page, which flagged the social revolution that started the merge in the business sector, which is a big, big wake up call. And the Time magazine cover page that same year, which chose the protestor as the person of the year.
 
Whether it’s worked through the participant in the ** the United kingdom riots or occupant Wall Street in the United States, the protesters activism in 2011 reflects the universal power of individuals when they’re trusting the worldwide principal social institutions and corporations among them erodes. Actually I have here also the Fortune magazine from September. I didn’t have the time to include it in my presentation but this September issue ranked the corporations that combine the best social and economical issues just as we heard before hand; and look this is just the current issue of the Fortune magazine. This is a very hot and daily topic.
 
So to me this trend is obvious. I wrote about it in a book in 2007 but it’s in Hebrew, entitled: The Social Revolution of Business Law. But I think that no one, even people who are not participating in this conference can ignore that today’s corporate reality has triggered the importance of implementing social responsibility in human rights protections into the corporate reality. In other words, it is true that the conventional* attitude that prevailed in corporate law in the past was focused narrowly on the expected profit of the company and the chairholders. Today, however, this approach is anachronistic and certainly with significant social economically corporations are concerned.
 
One interesting point, especially for me as a legal scholar, is that CSR is not anymore only a social phenomenon, it’s not only  a business phenomenon, it is also a legal one. CSR indeed starts at the voluntary and non-legal compliance phenomenon. However, today it becomes more and more connected to the legal world as well. Therefore, it appears that the phenomena that in the past was regarded predominantly as an ethical obligation of the corporation and its directors, is now becoming rooted* in the new legal frameworks and disciplines around the world. It could affect the exposure of corporations and their leaders to litigation in similar legal or regulatory exposure in the coming year.
 
The CSR is a phenomena is slowly but surely assimilated into law and influence the legal perception that the corporation should not only be a profitable tool, but also should be responsible for the social and environmental consequences of its activities and be responsible for the welfare of society. This is mainly because of the reason that the concept of the shared value becomes more relevant than shares value, and protecting the stakeholders interests becoming not as important than stockholders interest.
 
Indeed the interpretation and application of CSR may change according to the context, depending on local factors such as culture, environmental conditions, and legal framework. Still, CSR is an international and universal matter that has been implemented in many countries in different forms. For instance the Eiffel Tower in France uses a renewable energy system; in Singapore supermarkets stopped selling ** products. Even if we would have a look at some countries as an example, deep changes are carrying the regulation of corporate la. Such is the case the in Israel, the United Kingdom, the United States with regards to corporate responsibility.
 
In Israel, for example, both legal cultural links of legislation increasingly recognize the obligations of company’s officers to take into account the workers, creditors and other parties of interest. Similarly the Israeli Companies Law defines in Section 11 that the company’s purpose is to operate according to business consideration, first of all, for the production of profits. But and an amount of consideration may also be taken into account the interest of its creditors and employees in the public interest.
 
In addition, a range of Israeli specific law requires a corporation to consider human rights in their business. The Israeli and other countries law books contain many, many laws targeting social environmental challenges such as law regarding the protection of minorities at work, labor, waste of pollution, recycling and more.
 
A strong expression of these was given in a ruling rendered in 2009 by Israeli Supreme Court of Justice ***, we imposed the obligation on shareholders in a company who took many loans that gave the company very high leverage and jeopardizing its creditors. This ruling was made shortly after the subprime crisis in the United States and held that managing a business in this manner constitutes a business disability with legal ability because and I site: “The principle of justice and *** are now an integral part of private law and are deeply planted in both contracts in corporate law.”
 
Recently the business enterprise is characterized by duality. On one end, it’s business considerations are guided by concerns of efficiency and effectiveness, while on the other it is a black obligated to furnace and goodness in its relationship with the various groups it comes into contact with whether it’s a part of it’s business. Consisting* such as customers and employees creditors and this is part of the Court opinion, the Supreme Court opinion, not only of the business sector.
Similar approach is heard also in English law in section 172 to the Companies Act 2006, which states that: “A director of a company must act in the way he considers, in good faith, would be most likely to promote the success of the company for the benefit of its members as a whole,” including the interest of the company’s employee, suppliers, customers, community and the environment. And this is also the case in the United States corporate law, where most states have communities law in which directors while considering takeover proposals abide to take into account the interest of all parties who are connected to the company, including its workers and customers. So since our initiatives are becoming increasingly significant by new market forces and changes in public and legal expectation from the business sector.
 
All these forces work together in creating an organizational environment in which companies give a significant weight to social implications when making business decisions. Moreover, and as this conference perfectly proves, not only corporate social responsibility programs reports investment and indexes are extremely popular today, so is the case with the international discourse on human rights and corporations led by the protect, respect and remedy framework that in the United Nations guiding principles and business and human rights in 2011.
 
These guidelines formalize the responsibility of businesses to respect human rights and articulate to society’s expectations that businesses should respect human rights, such as: worker health and safety, damage to people’s health through environmental accidents, use of forced labor, child labor or underpayment of workers, discrimination against employees, product safety and data privacy.
 
The interesting thing is that the guidelines are applicable to all States and to all business enterprises, both transnational and others, regardless of their size, sector, location, ownership and structure. And were adopted into numerous international bodies including the OSCD, GRI sustainability responding standards, stock market indexes such as the Dow Johnson sustainability index, *** for Good, international corporations and ISO 26000.
 
Because of the guidelines importance and close relations with this conferences theme, I will talk about them in a few minutes, but meanwhile and in order to summarize this introduction, I think that I don’t have to convince you any more that the business and legal climate is changing towards CSR.
 
I would, therefore, like to move on and collaborate with CUMIPAZ’s mission to think about effective ways to further address social issues and exchange positive practices in the CSR and business human rights field. Therefore, I’ll turn out to more concrete issues and speak about practical and innovative tools aiming to further substantiate the protection of social responsibility, anti corruption and human rights in corporations and business sectors.
 
The first is suggesting a little model aiming to apply human rights that are usually set in a different state constitutions directly on the business sector. And the second is a proposal to use the famous and effective legal process of cross sections as a catalyzer for CSR compliance by corporations.
 
These two issues are well connected to the goals of CUMIPAZ and to the international discourse as reflected in the two important United Nations initiatives. The first is the United Nations Convention against Corruption from 2003, which states in Article 35 that: “Each State Party shall take such measures as may be necessary, in accordance with principles of its domestic law, to ensure that entities or persons who have suffered damage as a result of an act of corruption have the right to initiate legal proceedings against those responsible for that damage in order to obtain compensation.”
 
And the second is the 2011 United Nations Guiding principles on business and human rights, which I just showed, which emphasizes the State’s duty to protect against business related human rights abuse and take appropriate steps to ensure the effectiveness of domestic judicial mechanisms and remedies when human rights are breached also by the business. With the same token, this principle states that businesses have a responsibility to respect human rights and should avoid infringing them.
 
Though these two missions were drafted by the United Nations and therefore are in the center of the International plainfield, they are directed also to the interior state mechanisms and are deeply connected to CSR issues.
 
So, my first suggestion deals with the legal mechanism that connects human rights as part of CSR to the business sector. Indeed, csr and business human rights are not synonyms, however, no doubt that human rights are included or maybe even serve as a precondition to CSR. Traditionally, human rights is a political issue has a much longer and more formal history than CSR, which spreads on a much wider range of subjects. Still, the universal declaration of human rights, for example, which was adopted by United Nations General Assembly in 1948 includes civil and political rights, economic and social rights.
 
Many aspects of corporate activity today might affect those rights. For example labor rights are affected by the economic aspect, non-discrimination laws are related to the social aspect, how the environmental aspects of corporate activity affects a range basic human rights such as the right for clean air or clean water, etc.
 
So, today’s circumstances in which corporations become increasingly more significant, let international communities to significantly advance in examining and clarifying the links between corporations and human rights; and no doubt, that our daily human rights can be affected by corporate activities, not only by state activities.
 
Therefore, my proposal is that human rights determined in the Constitutions should apply directly to the behaviors of governments and corporations alike. The closeness and the connection of corporations to every individual of day to day life turn corporations into a natural and practical leverage for the incorporation of an approach emphasizing the importance of human right throughout the legal system. In today’s society corporations serve as the main conduit for executing human activities.
 
As I indicated previously, in some countries there are more corporations . than individuals, and some are larger than states. One statistic holds, among the largest, 100 economic in the world measured by the GDP for countries and sales for companies: 69 are corporations and 31 are countries. The business corporations through team constructural activities are multifaceted… (okay, I’ll speak slower) and involve several aspects  of society including the realm of capital, environmental, human, including both labor and customers, property products and services.
 
You can have a look in this table, which shows the hundred largest economies, well most of them are corporations not states. This is the new giants today. Not surprisingly, therefore, the human rights are tested in the most private day to day interactions, no less today than in instances of individual encounters with governments.
 
Corporations and their leaders can act, therefore, as mediators in the adoption of ethical norms and externalizing culture of trust. The influence of the corporation, then, is not only local affecting only the human elements adjacent, such as its official employees, but it also extends to the broader public as we just heard about Nestle** in the previous discussion, which includes the corporations, clients, suppliers, investors and many in the communities in large.
 
Traditionally, however, the low it indeed tended to perceive human rights set in the Constitution as the barrier protecting individuals only from the State omnipotent power. Somehow, it’s in the imbalance between the individuals and the governments. In this sense human rights were perceived as part of public law. 
 
Accordingly, comparative law shows that in many places in the world the accepted view is that the application of human rights set in the Constitution in private law and mutual relations is indirect through creative legal techniques; not directly by the Constitutions. But I suggest here that contrary to this common perception my main claim is that human rights must apply directly, it’s about time, and explicitly in both public and private law in this era.
 
To justify my claim, let me give you an example: Let’s assume that an individual privately communicated with a friend via email regarding recent relationship issues with their spouse and the next day an unrelated site provides advertisement for a divorce attorney. These things happen. Can this violation of privacy and human dignity throughout the internet  be ignored when committed by private corporations, which today are larger and more powerful than some countries? Are the principles that supported a preparedly underlying arrangement for the protection of privacy and human dignity throughout the internet in a democratic state means to distinguish between corporations and the government authorities?
 
In an article that I worked with my friend and colleague, professor Asa Kasher from Israel, we hold that there is no justification for this crucial distinction, either from the perspective of democracies basic principle or from the individual’s right might be violated, who deserves real protection from any such act. The direct application model is the one that in appropriate cases it enables and mediates axis to the highest legislative normative layer that represents the principles of the country.
 
Metaphorically, the Constitutions is in the ** tablets of stone as it were that one can turn to when necessary. The advantage of the direct model is further supported by declaratory and educational advantages. Judges must give expression to human rights in its richest sense in the rulings, so that the public will understand the context of human rights, their conceptual role, also in interactions with corporations; and the United Nations starts to speak about it these days.
 
As for Latin America, from a short research I found that today more and more constitutional human rights make their way into private litigation against corporate bodies a well. In this regard, I will refer to the oldest procedure for the protection of constitution human rights in Latin America: The Amparo. This is, for instance, in Guatemala, Section 265 to the Guatemalan Constitution; some countries by the way refer to it as tutela and im probably not pronouncing very well.
 
This process is significant to business and I think that business should be *** , as it can be filed against corporations in Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Costa Rica, Uruguay and Venezuela. Not only against government entities as early stages as an example, it was noted in one of the articles that I read that the Amparo was expanded to allow claims against private manufacturers for failing to provide complete product information or warnings, and so was the case with environmental damages that occurred bny companies.
 
To summarize, the implementation of human rights in the context of corporations transparently broadcasts the message that educationally and effectively structures the place in the importance of human rights in our world. This trend is justified by legal and international justifications, which trigger the possible emerging of corporate judiciary legal duty to consider human rights.
 
As I mentioned earlier, the most influencing document is that in 2011 UN guiding principles on business and human rights. As said by professor John Ruggie, you probably know the global compact initiative, so this one is a modern one, more progressive one. So, professor John Ruggie, and later rectified numerous international bodies, providing states with the necessary tools to address human rights issues regarding corporations. By default, Ruggie’s motive was not to create a binding multilateral treaty, rather a non binding international court for each state individually to protect human rights caused by corporations and to adapt a national action plan to address the specific human rights issues.
 
The United Nations guiding principles on business and human rights provides an international legal platform for the business sector to implement the requirement of respecting human rights. And I think that Cumipaz can help with this positive effort.
 
The guideless are founded on three pillars. First: State’s duty to protect individuals against human rights abuses by corporation. Second: Business responsibility to respect human rights by imeding due diligence in the process to avoid infringing the rights of others and to address adverse impacts that they are involved in. And three: The requirements for parties involved in adversed human rights impacts to facilitate, appropriate defective remedies for those affected by business related human rights abuses.
 
Under the United Nations guidelines, the definition of human rights lies those rights contained in the International Bureau of Human Rights and the International Labour Organizations Declaration on fundamental principles and rights at work. And according to United Nations guidelines, companies are required to conduct human rights due diligence in their investment decision making process to ensure they are not complicit in human rights abuses.
 
Other legal justifications to implement human rights and business activity, existing many domestic laws, regulation and standards across the world. Such laws should be considered during activities in foreign countries by any multinational corporation in order to prevent any legal consequence.
 
In addition, as we heard in the previous two talks this morning, there are also business justifications, not only legal ones to implement human rights by the business sector. Failing to respect human rights will most likely cost money in the longer term damaging brand value and reputation and increasing the risk of litigation and non-compliance with the growing body of legislation in this area.
 
It is algo claimed that management of human rights risks is a proxy for management quality. Companies frequently suffer loss as a result of failing to appropriately consider human rights in conducting their business, affecting their share price in the process. Moreover, breaching in human rights may expose companies to financial costs that are related to corporate financial performance.
 
I met a study that was done by Oxford University and Arabesque Asset Management, showed that 88 percent, of the research found that solid environmental social and government practices result in a better operational performance; and 80 percent found that there is a positive influence on stock price performance. ***, many cases are brought against companies worldwide on human rights ground through domestic law on discrimination, privacy, employment rights or health and safety. Many of those cases end in an expensive settlement.
 
Fines: by failing to appropriately protect human rights in business, companies risk themselves in being exposed to fines according to domestic laws. Disruption of operation may be also caused by human rights related issues. For example: in the mining industry projects have been impeded by protestors or social controversy. These types of disruptions can lead to significant costs for the companies involved as was the case with Nike child labor, the famous case in the 1990s.
 
There are also reputation damage. A 2009 study down in the United States and the United Kingdom, found that when news items reporting human rights abuses became publicly known, firms experienced significant negative abnormal returns. Some recent examples including the United Express flight 3411 incident, when O’hare International Airport Aviation security officers forcibly removed a passenger from the United Express flight, which caused a significant social response that affected the industry and finally resulted in a lawsuit against United, and later on the parties reached a confidential settlement.
 
A more positive approach towards the implementation of human rights in business might see these cases as opportunities. And not only as duties involve sanctions, some of the benefits that can be caused involve a positive impacts upon ** relations, including with employees, contractors, trade unions, local communities, non-governmental organizations, local and national governments and others. Better opportunities for positive public relationships with society, the press and other media, a positive impact upon investor confidence and share value, and improving employee morale due to good safely performance.
 
All these justifications, I think, go hand in hand with my proposal to adapt the direct application of constitutional human rights on corporations, which provide the most effective arrangement that allows the individual in society to safeguard the human dignity with a direct system of remedies, legal remedies, by utilizing the Constitution, the State’s most fundamental legal document to **.
 
The direct application model provides a reminder and in ** for corporations to respect human rights and simplifies the process for individuals, to create human rights claims directly against corporations. In other words, there are many justifications why a corporation must obey human rights ⏤specially today⏤ protect them and implement them within it’s business strategy. It is clear today that any chief executive officer in a successful company that wants to reach high performance maximizes the value of its shares, avoid any disruption of operation, lawsuits or fines, must protect human rights in the corporation activity. And this is not contradicting making profits, it’s the other way around; and this is regardless of any moral justification. The protection of human rights became an integral aspect in business strategy. Those corporations and their senior executives and board members voluntary apply leading practice in identifying and managing human rights issues in their conduct. These companies and executives view that as an opportunity rather than a burden, and this is consistent with a strategy and a belief that leads to the a better future their enterprise, stakeholders and debt** to the global business environment.
 
However, applying constitution human rights directly on corporations is just one proposal that I would like to share with you today. The second is with a so called “procedural issue”, the one with a very significant but one with a very significant potential to improve the implementation of CSR practices by the business sector. This came from the Israeli experience and the U.S. experience.
 
My proposal deals with a well known legal process of class action, which is very common in Israel and the U.S. and less in Latin America, although proposals for convergence towards the American class actions model of group litigation seem to be gaining popularity around this region as well.
 
My claim is that class actions help to increase the business sectors social and public responsibility, and to enforce proper norms on corporations. In the economic and social world around us, where in depth social economic and legal changes are emerging and corruption is unfortunately evident, everywhere… Class action can serve as one of the strongest and most significant legal instrument that gives power to the people, distinct from the classical trial that brings only two sides together.
 
Class actions enables citizens to take personal responsibility, to cooperate and collectivise their enormous potential by encouraging them to protect their rights ⏤including Constitutional human rights⏤ and to protect themselves mainly against corporation misconduct and against corruption without resulting to regulators. In essence, class action allows the aggregation of a large number of individuals similar claims arising from identical factual circumstances, or which is connected through a legal situation common to a group, class or category of individuals. This is mainly the case with consumer’s rights, employees rights, environmental and human rights issues. These are the classical CSR issues.
 
Class actions, therefore, not only facilitate ** to the court but also their main role is to help substantiating social and public values in the business sector by deterring tools for corporations. In this regard, it is important to remember that most defendants in class actions today are corporations. This is according to an empirical study carried out by the Research Department of the Israeli Judiciary, which found that until 2012, 72 percent of class action emotions examined were filed against corporations. And this creates a big legal risk for corporations.
 
As I said before, class action has become a significant instrument of private enforcement in the areas of consumer reason, banking, insurance and labor. However, it seems that in the modern corporate era it would be correct to go back harness the tool of class action also for more social and public issues against business corporations, whose relationship to human rights and social issues is often no less significant than that of the government.
 
As I said before, I read that many Latin American countries still do not allow class actions but more and more stakeholders, scholars, policy makers, consumer protection advocates are discussing it these days. So it might be a good thing to be familiar with. Saying that, I know that it is not accurate to talk about the whole region of Latin America as a unit, and it is obviously oversimplifying a complex reality connected to 20 different countries: Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Puerto Rico, Uruguay and Venezuela. Each with its own official legal system, political institutions and distinction social and economic reality.
 
Still, your countries belong to the same legal tradition and share the Constitutional read* of protection known as Amparo, which is an exception to the individual litigation, as I just said before, Article 265 to the Guatemalan Constitution.
 
So, in recent years class actions is a means to resolve claims for damages in ** claims mainly against corporations, have become the main topic of law reform in many civil countries, including Latin America. In this respect, we can refer to the Brazilian model, which created the Public Civil Action Law in 1985, though it’s not exactly the same as the class action in the United States.
 
According to the United States chamber report from 2014, changes in Brazil ** justice system, the largest nation in South America, might influence similar changes in neighboring countries. Today, class actions for damages enacted also in Chile, Colombia, in Mexico, and I understood that the fact of class actions exists or under enactment process, also in Argentina, Costa Rica, Ecuador and Mexico. Still, Latin American countries are far behind other regions of the world with the expect or the implementation of effective collective arms.
 
However recalling to an article that I just read before I came here and I site: More than a dozen Latin American constitutions contain at least one provision that mentions consumer protection including compensation of harms against defective products, faulty services, poor quality control, deceiving publicity and monopolistic practices. This is for instance Article 119 and 130 to the Guatemalan Constitution, which can also be found in Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru and Venezuela.
 
In addition, and as claimed in some other articles and reports, the tendency in Latin America seems also to be in favor in expanding the procedure, protection of the individuals and collective rights through the establishment of different forms of collective litigation including class section. The legal read of Amparo ⏤which is again the legal term⏤ and other similar devices year top ten* declaratory and injunctive relief continue to serve as a palliative* until the official laws catch up with the needs of those affected with large scaled accidents and other harms including those arising out of the defective products  and faulty services. The legal Amparo Collective Law is perhaps the closest resemblance, though its results is declaratory not demonitory judgement, that most Latin American countries have to denotion of representative litigation.
 
If you would like to learn from the Israel experience the number of class section motions in Israel today is enormous with over 1,500 such applications in just the past year. Imagine to yourself, this is almost 5 per day class sections against corporations. In Israel we have a relatively  young class action law, which was enacted 11 years ago in 2006. The Israeli class action law brought about a dramatic change in class actions in Israel. The number of class actions motions is rising dramatically, for example: While in 2007 there were only 28 applications submitted for class action suits* in Israel, ten years later, in the past year there were 1,500 such applications.
 
Section 1 of the Israeli Law indicates that class actions are intended to promote four main objectives:
1. To exercise the right of access to the court including for members of the population who find it difficult to go to court as individuals
2. To enforce the law and deter its violation
3. To provide the appropriate relief to victims of breach of the law
4. As an efficient ** and  comprehensive management of claims.
 
And remember most of the class actions were filed against corporations and their claims were divided among the following issues: 41% were consumer related, 12% insurance, 3% banking, 5% antitrust, 6% environment, 1% discrimination, 1% workplace discrimination, 11% equality for people with disabilities, 10% labor law and 10% reimbursement of fines charged illegally by authorities, which is not connected to corporations.
 
Moreover, in Israel we also have in addition to the very developed class action mechanism, a class action fund, which operates under the Ministry of Justice and is intended to finance class actions, which hold public and social importance regarding the submission and clarification. The fund that they serve as a chair is almost an international precedence* and therefore can also be seen as a kind of a laboratory for some of the normative issues regarding class actions that can be used in other legal systems.
 
Since the class action fund was set up under the Ministry of Justice, the State is involved but only indirectly by creating a stronger force for individuals to deal with large corporations. This is the States softer way through its budget to empower and encourage individuals to enforce their own rights. Thus, the state is contributing to social change by corporations but not through direct regulatory intervention, which is compulsory and **.
 
The following are some examples of request to the funds for which financing was approved and connected to the CSR. This is s good example of the legal meets the business consideration:
1. A claim of discrimination against women filed against the registration that refuses to allow women on there because of religious concerns
2. Assertion* that a large food chain does not provide food shipments to our communities and therefore discriminates against them
3. A similar claim with respect to banks that don’t open branches in our communities
4. A claim, also known worldwide, against pollution and decepcion on the part of  Volkswagen company
5. A claim in which the plaintiff alleges serious air pollution in the central bus station in Jerusalem affecting tens of thousands of people daily
6. A claim of environmental damage caused by the spilled oil, millions of gallons of crude oil from an oil pipeline into public areas and nature  reserves
7. An action against one of the health funds that stopped ** therapy,  the use of cholesterol lowering drug and required the insured people to use an alternative generic drug without prior warning and without medical considerations
8. An action against one of the cellular companies arguing that it does not offer devices for people with disabilities
9. A plaintiff claim that nursing companies don't pay their caregivers for time spent in transitions from one patient to another
10. A plaintiff who alleges that one of the natural gas partnership in Israel declared as a monopoly by the antitrust commissioner charges an excessive and  unfair rate for gas
 
However this does not end the importance of the class action mechanisms. In recent years the call has gone out to reduce regulatory and State intervention against corporate misbehavior. It seems to me that in this context as well, there is nothing like the tool of class action to strengthen the power of individuals and accordingly this tool reduces the need for regulators paternalistic intervention, which is usually broad, ** and not focused enough.
 
In this regard, I would like to refer you to an Israeli Supreme Court decision from last year, which approved hearing one of the largest class action in Israel so far. The class action was filed against Israeli monopolistic electricity company asking for consumers refund of 10 billion dollars allegedly caused by corruption. This opinion emphasizes the importance of private enforcement against corruption besides the criminal track and the intensive regulatory supervision.
 
To summarize class actions is a mass civil and public litigation would improve access to justice and improve the CSR implementation that can change the behavior of the business sector. Class actions can supply remedy to private people who suffer direct and indirect losses from corporations and will deter and discourage the business sector. By that class actions promote good public policy. The class action procedure is also consistent with the United Nations High Commissioners for Human Rights mission, which launched the Accountability and Remedy Project in November 2014 in on order to contribute to a more effective  implementation of the guiding principles of business and human rights that I showed before.
 
This project focuses on substantial legal and practical issues that have an impact on the effectiveness of judicial mechanisms in achieving corporate accountability and access to justice in cases business related human rights abuses. By the way, historically, class action created one of the most influential supreme court ruling affecting U.S. human rights law in 1954, well known brand versus Board of Education, which is  a very famous constitutional court opinion in the United States. As you probably know this judgment cancelled the discriminatory separate but equal policy in the United States public education system and this important human rights litigation started as a class action.
 
So in concluding my discussion I hope that I was successful in convincing you that the more the corporations and their senior executives have growing obligations to be involved and respect human rights. As the United Nations guidelines declare this is true with regard to all States and to all business enterprises, both transnationals and others, regardless of their size, sector, location, ownership and structure. No doubt that corporate social responsibility in general and the responsibility of corporations to respect human rights, in particular, are crucial especially today when the social, moral, business and legal approaches of human rights are maturing quickly.
 
When our daily life is influenced by corporations there are no better words to describe it than those that were perfectly formulated by Eleanor Roosevelt in a 1958 address to the United Nations and I site: “Where, after all, do universal human rights begin? In small places, close to home - so close and so small that they cannot be seen on any maps of the world. Yet they are the world of the individual person; (...) Unless these rights have meaning there, they have little meaning anywhere.”
 
I would like to end with a special thanks to the Global Embassy of Activists for Peace for inviting me and creating this forum. No doubt that CUMIPAZ is a supreme mission. I salute and I’m highly impressed and appreciative of its effectiveness to promote CSR and business human rights. This is a crucial component in achieving the goal of creating an international space of dialogue and integration for the development and for sustaining the happiness of the human being and nations. And of course thank you very much to all of you for spending part of your day with me and discussing this important key issues.
 
Thank You very much.
 
 

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access_time Tue, 10/02/2018 - 11:30