Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Ralph Lauren Corp. Prevails Against Religious Shareholder Activists
Ralph Lauren Corp. Prevails Against Religious Shareholder Activists
Aug 27, 2025 4:07 PM

Earlier this month, religious shareholder activists from the Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility, Mercy Investment Services and the Sisters of Mercy nabbed headlines by attempting to force Ralph Lauren Corp. to conduct a needless and politically driven human-rights risk assessment of offshore vendors.

The ICCR effort is another “name and shame” tactic intended to publically embarrass pany refusing to play ball with a left-leaning organization. According to the Huffington Post, the nominally religious shareholders’ proposal is …

… backed by the AFL-CIO Reserve Fund, an investment fund for the national trade union center, that urged Ralph Lauren to assess human-rights risk throughout its supply chain. pany’s board of directors told shareholders to vote the proposal down.

Rev. David Schilling, ICCR senior program director, however, made no mention of the union when he wrote:

The responsibility panies to respect and protect the rights of workers in their global apparel supply chains became the central theme of Ralph Lauren’s shareholder meeting this morning in New York City. I attended the meeting as a representative of the Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility (ICCR), a shareholder coalition active on human rights issues, and on behalf of our member Mercy Investment Services. Mercy and other ICCR members supported a shareholder proposal sponsored by the AFL-CIO requesting that pany conduct a human rights risk assessment. The collapse of Rana Plaza in Dhaka last April precipitated the filing of the resolution when the management of Ralph Lauren refused to join the Bangladesh Accord on Fire and Building Safety, a legally binding agreement endorsed by over 180 panies that seeks to implement systemic reforms in the Bangladeshi garment sector.

Cue the snark:

Evidently, Ralph Lauren management feels they are doing enough on human rights issues and told their investors they prefer to ‘go it alone.’

And this:

Going it alone is no way to ensure that human rights are protected in global supply chains.

Why, pray, not? Let’s again turn to HuffPo:

Ralph Lauren said in a statement to HuffPost that less than 3 percent of pany’s clothes are made in Bangladesh, where it does business with 15 factories. Its internal auditing systems include fire and building safety and worker surveys, and it participates in the International Labor Organization’s Better Work program, which provides additional ‘in-factory monitoring,’ pany said.

‘We only work with factories that uphold our high standards of labor practices and work closely with all of our global partners to ensure they are provided extensive training and monitoring for all safety and worker protection efforts,’ pany said.

pany concerned about its shareholders as well as monitoring its vendors to protect workers seemingly already is on the right track without leftist strong-arming. But, to the latter, it’s not good enough:

New York City Comptroller Scott Stringer, who spoke in support of the proposal at the shareholder meeting, told HuffPost on Thursday that he was bewildered by pany’s lack of action. The city’s pension funds hold around $23 million in Ralph Lauren stock. Stringer vowed to keep pressing Ralph Lauren on the issue.

‘We’re going to ing back to this,’ Stringer told HuffPost. ‘Their silence on worker safety and security is very troubling.’

The trendy clothes maker doesn’t see it Stringer’s way. pany defended its stance:

In its 2014 proxy statement, Ralph Lauren said the proposed human-rights risk report would have been an ‘unnecessary and a potential diversion of corporate resources with no corresponding significant benefit to stockholders.’

Ralph Lauren does offer a Citizenship Report, first released in 2013, which includes codes of conduct and ethical guidelines for its suppliers.

Bravo to Ralph Lauren for sticking to its guns in support of shareholders, and for its past and current efforts to ensure the safety and wellbeing of workers in foreign manufacturing plants.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
How do you spell relief?
You may have heard about the debate in Washington that erupted late last week, as Senate Democrats and Republicans sought ways to respond to rising gas prices. According to Marketplace’s Hillary Wikai, the majority Republicans settled on “a $100 gas-tax rebate to be paid for by drilling in Alaska’s Wildlife Refuge.” Michigan Democrat Debbie Stabenow proposed “a $500 rebate but pay for it by cutting the tax breaks for panies.” She said, “We should instead put that money back in...
The iron law of unintended consequences
A report from the road: I’m in Colorado Springs this week, and I noticed this note taped to the wall of the bathroom in my spartan lodgings at the local Ramada Inn: Due to restrictions made by the City of Colorado Springs, the toilets have reduced water pressure and may not flush as well as you are accustomed to. In order to prevent the toilet from stopping up, please flush the toilet as frequently as possible while using it. Thank...
Acton scholars in the news
Several Acton scholars will be on network cable this weekend to speak about current affairs in the United States. Andrew Yuengert, author of the “Inhabiting the Land” monograph (pictured at left), and Fr. Paul Hartmann will be interviewed on Raymond Arroyo’s “The World Over” news show on EWTN at 8:00 p.m. EST, Friday, April 28. Anthony Bradley (pictured at right) will be on “Heartland with John Kasich” on Fox News at 8:00 p.m. EST, Saturday, April 29, to speak about...
Economic turmoil in Zimbabwe
Where in the world would you pay $145,750 for a roll of toilet paper? According to an article in the New York Times, inflation in Zimbabwe is soaring higher than ever — about 900 percent since President Mugabe began seizing land from wealthy landowners in 2000. And inflation is climbing at unparalleled rates. What problems result from such rampant inflation? If inflation is climbing daily and you have $100 one day, it might be worth only $90 the next. People...
Evangelicals and Earth Day
Check out my Detroit News column today, “Humanity’s creativity helps environment,” in which I give a brief overview of the conflicting evangelical views of environmental stewardship. ...
Alarmist profiteering
Remember when I said that I thought there is a dangerous incentive in climate change research to make things seem worse than they are? (If not, that’s OK. I actually called it an “analogous phenomenon” to the possibility that AIDS statistics are exaggerated.) Well, TCS Daily reports that a letter to Canadian PM Stephen Harper signed by over 60 scientists asks a similar question. Richard Lindzen, Sloan Professor of Atmospheric Science at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), wonders, “How...
St. Joseph the Worker
Today is the feast of St. Joseph the Worker: Work is a good thing for man-a good thing for his humanity-because through work man not only transforms nature, adapting it to his own needs, but he also achieves fulfilment as a human being and indeed, in a sense, es “more a human being”. For the rest of this encyclical, Laborem Exercens, click here. ...
The ‘gospel’ of Judas
Over at OrthodoxyToday.org, Fr. Theodore Stylianpoulos demolishes the media driven speculation that the so-called Gospel of Judas might somehow turn traditional Christianity on its head. The Gospel of Judas is but another small window to Gnosticism, a hodgepodge of religious speculations that exploded on the scene during the second century. At that time, individual intellectuals or small and elitist groups around them, bothered by the basic story of the Bible, especially the violent God of the Old Testament and the...
Wanted: a Duke lacrosse team hero
Duke University is embroiled in a sensational scandal involving its lacrosse team and allegations of sexual assault of a stripper at a wild party. But, as Anthony Bradley points out, the case is really symptomatic of a much larger problem in American society. “Why is there no national outrage about the fact that two adult women subjected themselves to voyeuristic, live pornography?” he asks. “What kind of men do we raise in America that they would even want to hire...
The morality of narrative imagination
While doing research for my ing lecture at the Drexel University Libraries’ Scholarly Communication Symposium, I ran across this excellent book by Janet H. Murray, Hamlet on the Holodeck: The Future of Narrative in Cyberspace (New York: Free Press, 1997). Dr. Murray at that time was a professor at MIT and is now at Georgia Tech. One of the interesting things that Dr. Murray discusses is the necessary element of what she calls “moral physics” in narrative worlds. She writes,...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved