Sarosh Kuruvilla is currently Professor of Industrial Relations, Asian Studies and Public Affairs at Cornell University. He joined Cornell’s faculty in 1990 after obtaining a doctorate in business administration from the University of Iowa in 1989, and after a career as a labor relations manager in the industry in India. He currently directs the New Conversations Project: Sustainable Labor Standards In Global Supply Chains.
Human Rights in Global Supply ChainsImmersion Program
Overview and Courses
The device you are using to read this page was created by people in the global workforce. Do you know from which country it originated? Or which international labor agreements, if any, affect the workers who made it? What about the company that sells the product; does it promise fair treatment of those workers?
In this certificate program, you will examine labor practices in the global supply chain and consider how those practices vary and evolve. First, you will examine the regulatory framework for global labor relations, including the impact of national treaties on workers. To do this, you will explore labor models in your own country as well as other relevant countries, including where your organization does business. You will then explore industry self-regulation, such as Nike’s Labor Standards, and consider the realities of auditing overseas partners. You will also identify the risks of and barriers to transparency along with the ways that reliable data can be made available to consumers and industry partners.
To complete the certificate, you will attend two 3-hour live virtual sessions with Cornell ILR School professor Sarosh Kuruvilla and Jason Judd, Executive Director of Cornell’s New Conversations Project. You’ll gain access to current research and share experiences with Cornell faculty and industry experts.
Completing this certificate will enable you to evaluate and identify strategies to improve labor practices both in your organization and within companies you conduct business with across the globe.
The courses in this certificate program are required to be completed in the order that they appear. If you choose to complete the certificate by attending the live virtual courses, please choose the dates and times that work for your schedule.
Course list
Research from Cornell's New Conversations Project shows that despite 25 years of sustainability efforts through codes of conduct, factory auditing, and remediation, there has been little improvement overall in labor conditions throughout global supply chains, Yet the research also demonstrates that sustainable improvement occurs under certain conditions, especially when companies integrate their sustainability practices with their sourcing practices. While many organizations have already begun to do this, the COVID-19 crisis has hastened the process, forcing companies to reexamine their supply chains and reconfigure relationships among buyers, suppliers, and workers.
These live sessions are broadly focused on answering the following questions: How can sustainable improvements in working conditions be made in today's business world with its rapid reorganization of supply chains? What factors limit an organization's abilities to integrate sourcing and sustainability strategies? How will global companies in apparel and other sectors navigate the necessary changes in relationships with suppliers and workers? In this live interactive online series, you'll explore how rigorous analysis of supply chain data and evidence-based decision making can be scaled up to produce better labor practices, informed sourcing decisions, and responsible business strategy.
You are required to have completed the following courses before taking this course:
- Public Regulation of Human Rights
- Private Regulation of Human Rights
- Improving Regulation of Human Rights
Session 1: Thursday, October 17, 2024, 10:00am - 1:00pm ET
- 25 Years of Codes of Conduct: Data on Failures and Successes
- What have we learned from 25 years of codes of conduct and auditing? What does new Cornell research show and what are the key problems that limit effectiveness? What have been the causes of failure? Why is private regulation generally ineffective? How do we reorganize programs to address the root causes? In this session, you will explore what comprehensive new research on the effectiveness of corporate codes of conduct and monitoring systems means for global brands. The session will also delve into the dynamics — practice multiplicity, behavioral invisibility, and causal complexity — that prevent labor programs from seeing what works.
Session 2: Friday, October 18, 2024, 10:00am - 1:00pm ET
- Improving Private Regulation for the Future
- In this session, we will focus on what companies can do to improve their private regulation programs as well as how the entire ecosystem needs to alter their practices to generate systemic improvement. We will address questions such as: What is the best way to align sourcing and compliance strategies inside companies? How should labor and sourcing be linked in practice? How can you measure and track improvements in labor and sourcing practices? More broadly, what works to improve outcomes for workers in global supply chains? How can the evidence support systemic changes in labor and human rights programs? And how do these efforts align with new hard-law developments in Europe such as the mandatory due diligence legislation?
How It Works
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Faculty Authors
Jason Judd is Executive Director of the Cornell ILR Global Labor Institute, which focuses on improving global labor practices. He previously led the Ship to Shore Rights Project at the International Labor Organization in Bangkok and served as Vice President of the Fair Labor Association in Washington, D.C., where he directed all accountability programs, including the FLA’s Fair Compensation work. Mr. Judd has worked in senior roles for the ILO’s Better Work program, Demos (New York), the Service Employees International Union (SEIU), the AFL-CIO, the Solidarity Center, and the Industrial Areas Foundation. His work has been featured in the New York Times and Financial Times, as well as on PBS. A former Fulbright Fellow, Mr. Judd holds an A.B. in Economics from Duke University and an MPA from l’École Nationale d’Administration (ENA/RULE).
Key Course Takeaways
- Analyze and evaluate labor relations regulatory approaches
- Diagnose issues in your company’s auditing practices and make recommendations for improvement
- Establish best practices for holding your organization accountable
- Evaluate solutions to encourage change in the future and make better decisions for yourself and your organization
- Explore how rigorous analysis of supply chain data and evidence-based decision making can be scaled up to produce better labor practices
- Engage in live discussions with Cornell faculty and peers to deepen your understanding and share experiences
Download a Brochure
Not ready to enroll but want to learn more? Download the certificate brochure to review program details.What You'll Earn
- Human Rights in Global Supply Chains Certificate from Cornell ILR School
- 36 Professional Development Hours (3.6 CEUs)
- 30 Professional Development Credits (PDCs) toward SHRM-CP and SHRM-SCP recertification
- 30 Credit hours towards HRCI recertification
Watch the Video
Who Should Enroll
- Executives in global organizations
- Corporate Social Responsibility professionals
- Consultants
- Lawyers
- Professionals at NGOs or social auditing firms/investment funds
- Team members from Sustainability Departments or Multi-stakeholder institutions
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