Global Procurement Reform
In partnership with the Harrison Institute for Public Law at Georgetown University and the Danish Institute for Human Rights, ICAR convenes the International Learning Lab on Public Procurement and Human Rights (Learning Lab).
The Learning Lab aims to be a network of central and local government procurement agencies and purchasing officers; representatives of other relevant government bodies, such as ministries; procurement professional associations; regional and international organizations; non-governmental organizations (NGOs); national human rights institutions (NHRIs); and relevant academics.
The Learning Lab’s global network will be a platform and mechanism for:
· Experience-sharing among procurement actors on approaches to integrating respect for human rights;
· Generating knowledge about public procurement law and policy and human rights;
· Producing and disseminating tools and guidance to build capacity to integrate human rights issues among procurement professionals; and
· Promoting coherence between procurement and human rights in international and regional frameworks and initiatives.
The Learning Lab’s work is divided into four “hubs,” namely, electronics, apparel, international financial institutions, and private security. Each hub is led by an organization with relevant expertise, which will contribute research and tools that will be disseminated via the Learning Lab’s network. ICAR and the Harrison Institute lead the apparel hub.
For more information on the Learning Lab, please see www.hrprocurementlab.org
Our Publications on Government Procurement
A new report published by CORE and ICAR reveals that that a third of companies that have supplied uniforms for UK public sector workers, including the armed forces and prison officers, have not reported on what they are doing to tackle slavery in their supply chains.
Our report ‘Who Made Our Uniforms?’ reveals that few contractors supplying uniforms and specialist safety clothing to the UK public sector are transparent about their ethical standards and international suppliers.
Public procurement – the purchase by the public sector of the goods and services it needs to carry out its functions – is a major component of the overall global economy, accounting for €1000 billion per year and on average 12% of GDP in OECD countries.
Human rights standards to which governments have signed up, such as the widely-supported UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights, oblige public buyers to ensure respect for human rights in their supply chains. At the same time, the recently-adopted 2030 Sustainable Development Agenda highlight the role of government procurement as part of the transition to sustainable production and consumption.
The U.S. federal government is the largest single purchaser in the global economy, with annual procurement spending that totals between $350 and $500 billion. Like other mega-consumers, it procures through global supply chains that enable large-scale production of goods to varying specifications—all at the lowest possible cost—and often in countries where rule of law and respect for human rights is weak or nonexistent. As such, the U.S. government’s global supply chains are linked to a range of human rights violations.