About a year ago, I reported on a new movement that would hold law firms to the U.N. Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights, and I promised to track the trend. In February 2012 the American Bar Association's House of Delegates endorsed the Ruggie principles, as they are also known, and urged the legal community to integrate them into their operations and practices.
With its president and president-elect attending this December's U.N. Forum on Business and Human Rights, the ABA is leading from the front on this issue. But where is the legal community's response to the ABA's clarion call? Many law firms advise clients to embrace business human rights, and no one denies that law firms are businesses. Yet in my perusal of leading law firm reports on corporate social responsibility (CSR), I have been unable to find any discussion of the Ruggie principles.
"A lot of people haven't even started talking about it yet," says Rae Lindsay, a Clifford Chance partner who heads that firm's business and human rights practice.?Clifford Chance is an honorable exception. It's among three firmsDLA Piper and Herbert Smith Freehills are the others that I foundto convene task forces that will develop a policy on the applicability of the U.N. Guiding Principles to their own law firms.
U.S. firms are generally a step behind. But Foley Hoagwhere former U.N. special representative John Ruggie is a senior advisersays that it is evaluating "how best to incorporate human rights due diligence into the firm's operations."
Conscientious law firms already grapple with work/life balance and procurement policies. What's provocative about the Guiding Principles is that they may call on law firms to examine the advice offered to clients. "Ruggie provides a useful framework for thinking about client relations and the practice of law," says Lindsay. "That's a challenge unique to law firms. And it's an area where there are no black and whites."
The companion report to the ABA's Ruggie resolution notes in a footnote that ABA Model Rule of Professional Conduct 2.1which "permits" lawyers giving legal advice to account for moral and social factorsmay "well" extend to the Guiding Principles. Some observers see in this footnote the early stages of soft law evolving into hard law.
If so, it's still highly viscous primordial ooze: We're talking about a footnote to a document with no authority speculating that a permissive provision in a model legal ethics code may reference the Ruggie framework. But hey, evolution has to start somewhere. The Ruggie faithful believe that over time, universally accepted norms will influence, shape, and be reflected in binding regulations.
Some might resist incorporating human rights considerations into legal advice. Responding to an internal Freshfields survey about CSR obligations in 2010, one lawyer wrote that the firm has "a right to choose clients after considering whether they fit within our commitments to CSR, but once they are clients we must give advice on the basis of the law and not our own views about CSR."
Others think enlightened legal advice is essential. "The greatest impact we can have [on human rights] is through the advice we provide to our clients," emailed DLA head of corporate responsibility Nicolas Patrick, writing on his own behalf.
Although Linklaters's CSR report uses some of the same words, it misses the full implications. It starts by proclaiming: "By far, the firm's greatest impact on the wider world is through the advice we provide to our clients." And it makes the same point about the environment. Yet the potential to improve human rights through good legal advice is ignored.
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