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Will Business and Human Rights regulation help Rajasthan's bonded labourers who mine sandstone?

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 18:18 authored by Shelley LichtmanShelley Lichtman, Kate Taylor, Tim Connor, Fiona Haines, Sara Toedt
Some of the worst human rights conditions globally are found in Rajasthan’s sandstone quarries. This paper asks if state-based regulation in the economic-North advanced under the Business and Human Rights agenda: disclosure-based regimes, due diligence compliance regimes and trade-based regimes, could advance efforts to improve respect for human rights in this sector. It adopts fields of struggle lens and global value chain theoretical approaches to business power and governance to understand the challenging political and economic dynamics that entrench harm within sandstone quarrying in Rajasthan. This analysis suggests that company-based disclosure and due diligence regimes will struggle to ameliorate these dynamics whilst trade-based approaches hold some potential to generate meaningful change.

Funding

Reducing modern slavery with new digital and enforcement technologies

Australian Research Council

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History

Journal

Journal of Industrial Relations

Volume

64

Issue

2

Start page

248

End page

271

Total pages

24

Publisher

Sage

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© Australian Labour and Employment Relations Association (ALERA) 2021

Former Identifier

2006112104

Esploro creation date

2022-08-13

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