The Role of the State as Buyer Under UN Guiding Principle 6

Claire O'brien, Claire O'brien, Claire O'brien, Olga Martín-Ortega
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

Public procurement is the purchase by the public sector of the goods and services it needs to carry out its functions. It has an essential role to play in facilitating States’ fulfilment of their duties to protect, respect, and fulfil human rights. Equally, government buying accounts for a significant proportion of the overall global economy. Worldwide, it has a value of approximately €1000 billion per year and it comprises, for instance, on average 12% GDP in OECD countries. As “mega-consumers,” governments have the purchasing power to set standards that can shift markets towards sustainable production, to exercise leverage over suppliers towards this goal – and to lead by example in introducing human rights into supply chain management by establishing arrangements for human rights due diligence. In the past, however, little consideration has been given to the human rights impacts of the central state and other public bodies in terms of their role as a consumer. This lack of policy coherence undermines fulfilment of the UN Framework and UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights. This submission addresses this gap by starting to clarify states’ human rights responsibilities regarding public procurement and identifying emerging good practices through which public buyers can fulfil these responsibilities. It defines public procurement and provides a brief account of its role, scale and relevance in the business and human rights context; outlines how public procurement is currently regulated under international and regional legal frameworks, with reference to instruments such as the WTO Agreement on Government Procurement (GPA), EU procurement rules and the UNCITRAL Model Law, as well as relevant policy frameworks, including those concerning “responsible global value chains”. It demonstrates how human rights can be integrated into the procurement cycle with reference to concrete examples. Measures promoting respect for human rights in public procurement emerging from National Action Plans on business and human rights (NAPs) are also considered. Finally, it presents recommendations for states and other procurement regulators, and other relevant stakeholders, including national human rights institutions (NHRIs), civil society organisations (CSOs), the UN system and business associations regarding the further development of public procurement as an element of the obligation to protect human rights in the context of business operations.
根据联合国指导原则6,国家作为买方的作用
公共采购是指公共部门购买履行其职能所需的商品和服务。它在促进各国履行其保护、尊重和实现人权的义务方面可发挥重要作用。同样,政府购买在全球整体经济中占很大比例。在世界范围内,它每年的价值约为1万亿欧元,例如,它平均占经合组织国家GDP的12%。作为“超级消费者”,政府拥有购买力,可以制定标准,将市场转向可持续生产,对供应商施加影响,以实现这一目标,并通过建立人权尽职调查安排,以身作则,将人权引入供应链管理。然而,在过去,很少考虑到中央政府和其他公共机构作为消费者的角色对人权的影响。这种政策一致性的缺乏破坏了《联合国工商业与人权指导原则》和《联合国工商业与人权指导原则》的落实。本意见书通过开始澄清国家在公共采购方面的人权责任,并确定公共采购方可以履行这些责任的新兴良好做法,解决了这一差距。它定义了公共采购,并简要说明了其在商业和人权方面的作用、规模和相关性;参考《世界贸易组织政府采购协定》、欧盟采购规则和《贸易法委员会示范法》等文书,以及包括“负责任的全球价值链”在内的相关政策框架,概述了目前如何根据国际和区域法律框架对公共采购进行监管。它以具体实例说明如何将人权纳入采购周期。还审议了《国家商业与人权行动计划》中提出的在公共采购中促进尊重人权的措施。最后,报告向各国和其他采购监管机构以及其他相关利益攸关方(包括国家人权机构(NHRIs)、民间社会组织(cso)、联合国系统和商业协会)提出建议,进一步发展公共采购,将其作为在商业运营背景下保护人权义务的一个组成部分。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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