Sullivan Principles

Description
Presentation describes on Sullivan Principles for organisations.

Sullivan Principles

Rev. Leon Sullivan, suggested that it might be ethically justifiable to operate in SA if two conditions were fulfilled:
1. Corporations should not obey the apartheid laws; this was a form of passive disobedience. 2. American firms should actively promote, in whatever ways they could, the abolition of the apartheid laws. This was a necessary condition if the firms were to produce more good than bad for the SA people overall.

The Sullivan Principles
There were six principles and they came to stand for: • The ascendance of moral principles over purely economic interests; • The power and influence of religious groups and social activists to change corporate behaviour;

• The power of multinational corporations, however reluctantly applied, to bring about social and political changes in the host countries of their overseas operations.

The Six Principles
• Non-segregation of the races in all eating, comfort, and work facilities



Equal and fair employment practices for all employees Equal pay for all employees doing equal or comparable work for the same period of time





Development of training programmes that will prepare, in substantial numbers, Blacks and other Non-whites for supervisory, administrative, clerical and technical jobs. Increasing the number of Blacks and other Nonwhites in management and supervisory positions.





Improving the quality of employees’ lives outside the work environment such as housing, transportation, schooling, recreation and health facilities.

(Where implementation requires a modification of existing South African working conditions, corporations seek such modification through appropriate channels.)

• What did the principles achieve? • Did the principles succeed in undermining the apartheid laws and help bring about their repeal?



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