A
worker sprays colour on a drawer inside a household furniture manufacturing
industry in the western Indian city of Ahmedabad November 28, 2014. Reuters/Amit
Dave
|
Giving staff the tools to
report workplace abuses, including forced labour, should improve data for
brands that are striving to ensure their products are slavery-free, a tech
startup said.
Thomson
Reuters Foundation report continues:
From
texts and calls to messaging apps and social media, technology could encourage
workers to share issues anonymously.
That
would give companies a better understanding of the risk of slavery in their
global supply chains, said Antoine Heuty, chief executive of Ulula, a software
and analytics platform.
"Our
platform can help build trust and enable workers to connect with companies in
real-time, anywhere, any time and in any language," Heuty told the Thomson
Reuters Foundation.
With
modern slavery increasingly making global headlines, companies are under
growing pressure from governments and consumers to disclose what actions they
are taking to ensure their operations and products are not tainted by forced
labour.
"By
combining workers' responses with other data, we can help companies in the
fight against slavery, by understanding their employees," said Heuty,
whose social enterprise is one of a rising number of businesses seeking to
tackle societal issues.
While
major companies from sportswear giant Adidas to budget fashion chain Primark
have set up whistleblower hotlines for workers in recent years, Ulula aims to
go further, Heuty said.
The
platform will merge feedback from workers with other data, such as satellite
imagery of palm oil plantations and building regulations for garment factories,
to give companies real-time insight into risks in their supply chains, he said.
Ulula
also hopes its software could in the future be used to build industry
benchmarks, allowing companies and suppliers to compare working conditions and
regulations against their peers.
"We
want to motivate a race to the top," Heuty said.
While
technology can play an important role in protecting vulnerable workers and
preventing abuses, it should not be seen as a "silver bullet", said
the Ethical Trading Initiative (ETI).
"Some
software platforms may well improve traceability and transparency, and be a
useful mechanism to flag risk," said Cindy Berman, head of modern slavery
strategy at ETI, a group of trade unions, firms and charities promoting
workers' rights.
"But resolving workplace grievances or rights violations cannot lie with technology."
About 25 million people globally were estimated to be trapped in forced labour in 2016, according to the International Labour Organization (ILO) and rights group Walk Free Foundation.
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