ISO
26000 Guidance on social responsibility is launched from ISO, the International
Organization for Standardization. Is an International Standard providing
guidelines for social responsibility (SR) named ISO 26000 or simply ISO SR. It
was released on 1 November 2010. Its goal is to contribute to global
sustainable development, by encouraging business and other organizations to
practice social responsibility to improve their impacts on their workers, their
natural environments and their communities. This standard was developed by
ISO/TMBG Technical Management Board - groups. ISO 26000 was published for the
first time in November 2010. ISO 26000 was developed through a
multi-stakeholder process, meeting in eight Working Group Plenary Sessions
between 2005 and 2010, with additional committee meetings and consultations on
e-mail throughout the five-year process. Approximately five hundred delegates
participated in this process, drawn from six stakeholder groups: Industry,
Government, NGO (non-governmental organization), Labour, Consumer, and SSRO
(Service, Support, Research and Others - primarily academics and consultants).
Leadership of various task groups and committees was "twinned"
between "developing" and "developed" countries, to ensure viewpoints
from different economic and cultural contexts. Since ISO operates on a
parliamentary procedure form based on consensus, the final agreed-on standard
was the result of deliberation and negotiations; no one group was able to block
it, but also no one group was able to achieve its objectives when others
strongly disagreed. The goal was to make ISO 26000 accessible and usable by all
organizations, in different countries, precisely because it reflects the goals
and concerns of each and all of the stakeholder groups in its final compromise
form.
User questions & answers