A growing number of global brands and retailers are adopting ethical recruitment policies stipulating, among other things, that all costs and fees related to labour recruitment are paid by the employer and not by the workers being recruited. Employer Pays Policies (EPP) are important in protecting workers from persistent and sometimes exorbitant debt that can take months or even years to clear – especially when illegal and “under the table” fees are so easily burdened on workers by informal brokers in less regulated environments.

Employer Pays Policies have been the center of discussion for fora such as the Leadership Group for Responsible Recruitment, Responsible Labor Initiative (RLI), Consumer Goods Forum (CGF), Fair Labor Association (FLA), and American Apparel and Footwear Association (AAFA) for several years now. These commitments are important both as signposts for the direction that business and industry is heading, and to advance ethical supply practices. The pace of moving from commitments and policy to more concrete action within supply chains needs to accelerate and has been called for from these discussions. Too many workers in the supply chains of these brands and retailers still see limited impact on the ground, and improved supplier and recruitment agency systems yet to be transformed. There is a smaller community of more progressive businesses that are already operationalizing, or are ready to operationalize their Employer Pays policies, and this community is indeed growing. Organizations such as Verité and Impactt have been working with many of these companies on the practical aspects of recruitment fees repayment for several years now.

Issara Institute, founded in 2014, has been working on advancing more ethical recruitment practices within supply chains since its founding, including work on aspects of ethical recruitment such as more transparent, ethical terms of engagement, more ethical and professionalized conduct on the part of employers and recruitment agencies toward each other and toward workers, and monitoring and verifying true labour recruitment conditions through worker voice. Two seminal investigations in 2018 outlined a feasible financial model for ethical recruitment in Southeast Asia (and technical approach for creating such models), and emerging signals of behaviour and systems change on the part of recruiters, suppliers, and jobseekers from the implementation of Issara’s worker voice-driven ethical recruitment programming.

Repayment of Recruitment Fees to Workers: 4 Emerging Best Practices, 2021 DOWNLOAD

post

page

attachment

revision

nav_menu_item

custom_css

customize_changeset

oembed_cache

user_request

wp_block

acf-field-group

acf-field

ai1ec_event

Human trafficking in the Afghan context: Caught between a rock and a hard place?
News & AnalysisPublications

Author: Thi Hoang, GI-TOC Decades of wars and internal conflicts have driven generations and millions of Afghan families into impoverishment, illiteracy, unemployment, and displacement, rendering them unable to provide for their household members...Read More

TAGS: Asia
Disrupting Harm in Malaysia: Evidence on Online Child Sexual Exploitation and Abuse
Guidance

Funded by the Global Partnership to End Violence against Children, through its Safe Online initiative, ECPAT International, INTERPOL and UNICEF Office of Research – Innocenti worked in partnership to design and implement Disrupting Harm – a rese...Read More

TAGS: Asia
Stop the Traffik App
Online Tools

A tool to enable people across the world to join the fight against human trafficking and modern slavery. child labour More information on the app can be found here. ...Read More

National Hotline 2019 Idaho State Report
Graphics & InfographicsPublications

The data in this report represents signals and cases from January 1, 2019 through December 31, 2019 and is accurate as of July 30, 2020. Cases of trafficking may be ongoing or new information may revealed to the National Hotline over time. Consequen...Read More