Abstract
National Action Plans (NAPs) on business and human rights are a growing phenomenon. Since 2011, 42 such plans have been adopted or are in-development worldwide. By comparison, only 39 general human rights action plans were published between 1993 and 2021. In parallel, NAPs have attracted growing scholarly interest. While some studies highlight their potential to advance national compliance with international norms, others criticise NAPs as cosmetic devices that states use to deflect attention from persisting abuses and needed regulation. In response to wider critiques of international human rights norms, and their failure to exact universal state compliance, experimentalist governance theory highlights the dynamic, dialogic and iterative character of human rights implementation as well as the role of stakeholders. In this article, we apply experimentalist governance theory to evaluate the role and character of business and human rights NAPs. Rather than attempting to evaluate NAPs’ ultimate consequences for rights-holders, which appears premature, we focus on NAPs processes. Specifically, we analyse NAPs processes in twenty-five states against five experimentalist governance criteria relating to (i) stakeholder participation; (ii) agreement on a broad problem definition; (iii) local contextualisation; (iv) monitoring and peer review and (v) periodic revision and learning. According to our findings, NAPs on business and human rights in most states demonstrate resemblance to the traits of experimentalist governance. In particular, our analysis points to the emergence of relatively sophisticated and demanding institutional governance mechanisms within NAPs — including the institutionalisation of complex deliberative processes. Nevertheless, our paper also identifies some significant shortcomings in NAPs, related to the lack of inclusion of vulnerable groups and the lack of explicit indicators and targets.
Highlights
National Action Plans (NAPs) on business and human rights are a growing phenomenon.1 Over the last ten years, 42 business and human rights NAPs have been published or are in-development worldwide
We suggest, an experimentalist governance analysis of business and human rights NAPs is relevant while making a novel scholarly contribution
In terms of categories of stakeholder participating in NAPs processed embraced: national and local government departments and agencies; national human rights institutions (NHRIs); civil society organisations (CSOs); businesses; labour and trade unions; international agencies; academics; and specific groups of rights-holders
Summary
National Action Plans (NAPs) on business and human rights are a growing phenomenon.1 Over the last ten years, 42 business and human rights NAPs have been published or are in-development worldwide.
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