Introduction
The Ethical Trading Initiative
The Ethical Trading Initiative (ETI) is a UK body which brings together
businesses, trade unions and non governmental organisations (NGO) with the
aim of improving working conditions in supply chains of member companies.
It has the support of, and is partly funded by the Department for International
Development. The employment standards adopted by ETI members are international
standards that come from the Conventions and Recommendations of the International
Labour Organisation. For further information please see the
rest of this website.
Just Pensions
Just Pensions is a thinktank and lobby group promoting Socially
Responsible Investment, with a particular focus on international development
issues. For further information, explore the rest of the
Just Pensions website,
or contact info@justpensions.org.
Background
ETI is often contacted by fund managers seeking to improve investee
company performance on labour standards in their supply chains. Many companies
sound good on paper, and it is not always easy to distinguish genuine
commitment from corporate spin. This paper offers some suggestions for the kind
of questions that can help fund managers get to the heart of a company's
approach. It covers how a company establishes credible policies, but just as
important, goes on to look at implementation and management systems. We intend
this paper to be the basis of discussion with fund managers and may produce
further versions based on feedback, once fund managers start to use the
document in their discussions with companies.


Appendix: Glossary of Terms
- Audit (of workplace labour practices)
- A thorough formal examination of the labour practices of a particular
workplace or company, based on corroborated evidence. The essence of an audit
is the examination of evidence and the cross-checking of the evidence to
establish its truth. This in turn implies the observance of established rules
and procedures concerning the gathering and evaluation of the various kinds of
evidence. [section 4]
- Code of conduct
- A code of conduct is a set of standards or rules for ethical
behaviour. In the context, of ethical
trading a code of conduct (or, more accurately, a code of labour practice)
is a set of standards concerning labour practices adopted by a company and
meant to apply internationally and, in particular, to the labour practices of
its suppliers and sub-contractors. These kinds of codes are in effect the
unilaterally adopted policy of a company and are sometimes considered as one
kind of voluntary private initiative. [section 1]
- Ethical trading and ethical sourcing
- This refers to the assumption of responsibility by a company for the
labour and human rights practices within its supply chain. The term concerns
the behaviour of the sourcing company but does not imply complete
responsibility or the existence of obligations that apply in every
situation.
- International Labour Organisation (ILO)
- One of whose oldest and most important functions of the ILO is to set
international labour standards. The ILO is unique within the United Nations
system for its tripartite structure and for its ability to supervise the
application of its standards. This tripartite structure gives employers' and
workers' representatives - the "social partners" of the economy - an equal
voice with those of governments in shaping the policies and programmes of the
organisation. [section 1] [section 4]
- Monitoring
- In the context of the workplace, monitoring refers to the
surveillance of labour practices against a standard by a person (or persons)
with a continuous or frequent presence in the workplace and unobstructed access
to management and staff.
Examples: A manager with a designated
monitoring function, continuously or frequently in the workplace in question;
an employee in that workplace with a designated monitoring function (e.g. a
union delegate); a government or local authority official who is assigned to a
particular workplace for monitoring purposes and is continuously or frequently
present in the workplace. "Frequent", in this context, means being present in
the workplace sufficiently often as to be able to detect variations from normal
behaviour. [section 2] [section 3] [section 4] [section 5]
- Social auditing & Social reporting
- An audit of a company's performance and impact across a range of
social indicators, including industrial relations, community impact, social
dialogue, stakeholder consultation, observance of labour standards and
contribution to social infrastructure. These terms were developed in the
context of Corporate Social Responsibility (see definition) and are meant to
cover a wider range of a company's performance than respect for minimum labour
standards in the supply chain. They cannot be used interchangeably with terms
such as monitoring , inspection and
verification as used in the context
of ethical trading. [section 4]
- Verification
- In the context of codes of labour practice verification concerns the
impartial examination and certification of claims made about the actual
observance of code provisions by suppliers or of claims made about the
activities that a company undertakes to give effect to its code. The essence of
verification is about the credibility of public claims. Verification implies a
re-examining of the evidence in order to establish that previously reported
results are accurate.
Because it is about credibility verification
would have to be conducted according to rules and processes by qualified
persons and organisations where the rules, processes and qualifications are
previously established through a process widely regarded as legitimate and
authoritative. Verification would have to be independent of the workplace being
examined and of any authority that carried out an inspection or assessment
being verified. Although some commercial enterprises offer "verification"
services and some multi-stakeholder initiative "certify" auditors or
workplaces, these enterprises and initiatives do not have sufficiently
widespread acceptance of their legitimacy or
authority.
Verification would be a rule-driven process where
organisations and individuals performing verification follow carefully defined
standards and obey rules that cannot be changed by the company that has engaged
them to perform verification. The thinking is that both organisations and
individuals would receive "accreditation" from an organisation created for this
purpose. Verification would then be the process to the "certification" (of
workplaces, companies or ethical trading management systems). [section 5]


ETI Base Code
Our Code of Labour Practice
We have adopted a Base Code of labour practice based on
International Labour Organisation
standards, which contains provisions on the following broad areas:
- Employment is freely chosen
- Freedom of association and the right to collective bargaining are
respected
- Working conditions are safe and hygienic
- Child labour shall not be used
- Living wages are paid
- Working hours are not excessive
- No discrimination is practised
- Regular employment is provided
- No harsh or inhumane treatment is allowed
The Base Code also includes important principles of code
implementation.
Follow this link to read the The
Base Code in full.

www.ethicaltrade.org
Published By
Ethical Trading Initiative
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House
14 Fulwood Place
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Tel: +44 (0) 20 7404
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© Ethical Trading Initiative 2002