I recently attended a panel discussion on Human
Trafficking and Modern Slavery at the 2012 Harvard Social Enterprise
Conference. The panel consisted of representatives from consumer product
companies, such as The The Body
Shop and Goodweave, who
prioritize human rights considerations in their supply chain management and
procurement practices. They spoke of the difficulty in ensuring that suppliers
were engaged in fair labor practices or avoiding child labor with such a
complicated global web of supply flow and numerous intermediaries. They shared
their respective company’s approach to tackling this issue and how it can be
translated into consumer loyalty. My takeaway from their presentations was that
the goodwill value associated with corporate social responsibility is tradeoff
with the higher cost associated with working only with suppliers and
manufacturers to guarantee fair labor practices with their employees.
The final panelist, a fellow at the Carr Center for Human Rights
Policy, Sidhartha Kara, shared his research on the changing nature of human
trafficking criminal networks. His primary message was that technology, lower
cost of transportation/travel, and increased communication is creating a sharp
increase worldwide in human trafficking. His research focused primarily on sex
workers and modern slavery/indentured servitude. When envisioning supply chain
networks we often consider product component logistics or final product
delivery, not webs of disenfranchised humans being shuffled from one country or
region to another in a life of labor or oppression. What this panelist did not
present was what is being done to address this shifting nature of criminal
networks. That’s where Google comes in.
ARTICLE & VIDEO: “Technology
versus traffickers: Nobbling nasty networks”
The March 2012 article and video (linked above) from The
Economist online details how Google has been bringing together diverse
stakeholders in the issue of criminal supply chain networks: governments, law
enforcement, security experts, software engineers, former victims of human
trafficking, heads of ports, and former criminals themselves. Google Ideas, a
new in-house think tank, has been fostering strategies about to develop new
applications to disrupt criminal supply chains such as the global arms economy.
In examining the sinister facets of supply chain networks, we face the
following questions:
To what extent should
corporations be responsible for ensuring fair labor practices or sustainable
sourcing in their supply chains?
What is the role of
emerging technology in combating criminal supply chain networks?
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