Rihanna's Fenty Beauty does not engage in audits on slavery, trafficking

Rihanna’s Fenty Beauty has given a disclosure that it does not conduct audits of its suppliers for child labor and expects its suppliers to follow the Suppliers Code of Conduct.
Rihanna's Fenty Beauty does not engage in audits on slavery, trafficking
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Rihanna's Fenty Beauty has given a disclosure that it does not conduct audits of its suppliers for child labor. Fenty Beauty said it expects its suppliers to adhere to the Suppliers Code of Conduct to ensure that the materials incorporated into supplies adhere to all norms related to slavery and human trafficking.

The controversy comes to light in the backdrop of the California code. In enacting the Transparency in Supply Chains Act, the California Legislature found that slavery and human trafficking are crimes under state, federal, and international law; that slavery and human trafficking exist in the State of California and in every country, including the US; and that these crimes are often hidden from view and are difficult to uncover and track.

The Legislature also found that consumers and businesses are inadvertently promoting and sanctioning these crimes through the purchase of goods and products that have been tainted in the supply chain, and that, absent publicly available disclosures, consumers are at a disadvantage in being able to distinguish companies on the merits of their efforts to supply products free from the taint of slavery and trafficking.

In passing the Transparency in Supply Chains Act, the Legislature declared the intent of the State of California to ensure that large retailers and manufacturers provide consumers with information regarding their efforts to eradicate slavery and human trafficking from their supply chains, educate consumers on how to purchase goods produced by companies that responsibly manage their supply chains, and, thereby, improve the lives of victims of slavery and human trafficking.

In order to provide consumers with this critical information and to allow consumers to make more educated purchasing decisions, the Legislature mandated the posting of information by certain companies. A company must meet certain criteria to be subject to the law. It must: (a) identify itself as a retail seller or manufacture in its tax returns; (b) satisfy the legal requirements for "doing business" in California, and (c) have annual worldwide gross receipts exceeding $100,000,000. The law requires companies subject to the law to disclose information regarding their efforts to eradicate human trafficking and slavery within their supply chains on their website or, if a company does not have a website, through written disclosures. (IANS)

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