Does the EU Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive protect indigenous peoples’ right to food? Assessment and future prospects
Abstract
The paper seeks to assess whether, and to what extent, indigenous peoples’
rights – in particular, their right to adequate food – are protected by the EU Corporate
Sustainability Due Diligence Directive 2024/1760, which identifies adverse human
rights impacts with reference to a closed set of human rights provisions listed in its
Annex. To this end, the paper discusses a number of relevant treaty provisions
included in the Annex – in particular, of the International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights, the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights
and the Convention on the Rights of the Child – in light of the position of the
competent UN treaty bodies. It concludes that the Directive already provides a high
standard of protection for indigenous peoples, even though it does not make binding
references to international instruments specifically enshrining indigenous peoples’
rights. This notwithstanding, it is advisable that EU Member States enlarge the scope
ratione materiae of the Directive in the adaptation process, either by specifying that
the human rights provisions listed in the Annex are not exhaustive, or by including
further human rights instruments in it.