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From voluntary to mandatory corporate accountability: The politics of the German Supply Chain Due Diligence Act
Authors:David Weihrauch  Sophia Carodenuto  Sina Leipold
Affiliation:1. Institute of Environmental Social Sciences and Geography, University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany;2. Department of Geography, University of Victoria, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada;3. Department of Environmental Politics, Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research—UFZ, Leipzig, Germany
Abstract:Following a long-standing and highly contested policy debate, in June 2021, the German parliament passed the Supply Chain Due Diligence Act requiring mandatory due diligence (MDD) of large companies, holding them accountable for the impacts of their supply chain operations abroad. Applying the discursive agency approach and using evidence from policy documents and 21 interviews with key stakeholders, we analyze the political strategies that paved the way toward MDD in Germany. The decisive strategy was an innovative benchmarking and monitoring mechanism that provided the legitimacy for a law and opened a window of opportunity for MDD supporters. Civil society and supportive politicians used this window of opportunity to build broad political coalitions that included the support of some companies. We discuss the ramifications of these findings for understanding the domestic politics behind the newly emerging norm of foreign corporate accountability.
Keywords:discursive agency  foreign corporate accountability  Germany  human rights  mandatory due diligence
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