Question: Does the company’s statement detail one or more specific, organisational policies or actions to combat slavery in their direct (tier 1) and/or in-direct (beyond tier 1) supply chain?
Answer:
Suppliers comply with laws and company’s policies (direct / tier 1),
Prohibit use of forced labour (direct / tier 1),
Prohibit use of forced labour (beyond tier 1),
Code of conduct or supplier code includes clauses on slavery and human trafficking (direct / tier 1),
Code of conduct or supplier code includes clauses on slavery and human trafficking (beyond tier 1),
Contracts include clauses on forced labour (direct / tier 1),
Suppliers respect labour rights (wages / freedom of association etc) (direct / tier 1)
16752311
Walk Free
MSA policy (revised)
2022
Verified by Community check_circle
updated 3 months ago by Pooja Yadav

(p. 1-2)

Thewodros Tesfaye.....2024-01-29 08:59:51 UTC

I dont see any mention of explicit mention of prohibition of child labor or mention of labor rights

Annica Edl.....2024-03-14 17:01:34 UTC

p.1

"Zebra is committed to conforming to the principles of the RBA Code of Conduct (which prohibits the use of forced labor, bonded labor (including debt bondage), indentured labor, involuntary prisoned labor, slavery or trafficking) in its own operations, and promotes that its suppliers implement the principles of the RBA Code in their operations as well as within their supply chains. Zebra has a Supplier Code of Conduct which explains our expectations when doing business as a Zebra supplier, including our alignment to pillars of the RBA Code of Conduct."

"A number of Zebra’s major suppliers, which comprise approximately 80% of Zebra’s direct supply chain by spend, represent and warrant performance with ethical standards and in conformance with applicable legal requirements in the agreements they sign to supply products and services to Zebra. Some of these major supply agreements also include representations to comply with the RBA Code of Conduct or commitments to not use prohibited labor."

"A number of those template documents require suppliers to understand the principles and intent of the Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) principles fostered by the RBA Code of Conduct or any internationally recognized equivalent in the areas of Environmental Sustainability, Health and Safety, and Labor and Ethics, and to provide services in conformance with the principles and aims of the RBA Code of Conduct, to the extent applicable."

Pooja Yadav.....2024-03-15 06:44:42 UTC