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Time for a Break from the UNGPs? Reimagining the Future of Business and Human Rights

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 November 2025

Alysha Kate Elias Shivji*
Affiliation:
Tecnológico de Monterrey, EGADE Business School, Mexico City, Mexico
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Abstract

This paper builds on a thought experiment by Professor Harry van Buren, asking what might emerge if the Business and Human Rights field took a temporary ‘break’ from the UN Guiding Principles (UNGPs). It critically analyzes how the UNGPs’ pragmatic and consensus-oriented design, while instrumental in institutionalizing the field, has also shifted its normative orientation. The paper argues that the increasing dominance of procedural pragmatism has led to compliance-driven approaches that risk displacing more justice-oriented, participatory visions of accountability. In response, the paper aims to contribute to potential reimagining of the field outside of the confines of the UNGPs by offering an alternative pathway grounded in Critical Dialogic Accounting and Accountability, Worker-driven Social Responsibility, and prefigurative politics. The paper concludes with a reflection that the future of BHR depends not just on expanding the implementation of existing norms but on rethinking what accountability can look like when built from below.

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This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
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© The Author(s), 2025. Published by Cambridge University Press

I. Dear UNGPs, It’s Not You, It’s Us

The United Nations Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights (UNGPs), endorsed in 2011, represent a watershed moment in the global effort to align business practices with human rights.Footnote 1 Developed under the leadership of John Ruggie, the UNGPs established a polycentric framework of state duties to protect human rights, corporate responsibility to respect human rights and access to remedies for victims of abuses.Footnote 2 This framework has been widely praised for its clarity, pragmatism and ability to galvanise global consensus on the role of business in respecting human rights.Footnote 3 The UNGPs have achieved notable milestones, including informing national action plans,Footnote 4 inspiring mandatory Human Rights Due Diligence (mHRDD) legislation in several jurisdictionsFootnote 5 and shaping corporate policies worldwide.Footnote 6

After more than a decade of these groundbreaking contributions, the UNGPs have become the dominant framework of the business and human rights (BHR) field. However, when a single framework becomes so central to a field, it can unintentionally constrain the ability to challenge assumptions and explore alternatives. This article draws inspiration from Professor Harry van Buren’s thought experiment for the BHR field to not mention the UNGPs in scholarship or scholarly discussions for a year.Footnote 7 Building on this idea, it explores why ‘taking a break’ from the UNGPs may be necessary, or at least a constructive step, for the advancement of the field. By ‘taking a break’, we are not dismissing the significance of the UNGPs but rather asking: What more can we achieve if we look beyond their boundaries? Could the UNGPs, in their dominance, have unintentionally diminished the normative richness and transformative ambition of the BHR field, shifting focus from what ought to be done to what is achievable in the moment?

The article begins with a brief analysis of the limitations of the UNGPs, focusing on their alleged achievement of widespread endorsement or consensus on the roles of business, governments and civil society in the BHR agenda, as well as challenges related to these consensus-seeking tendencies.Footnote 8 Next, it examines whether over-reliance on the UNGPs has led to a diminishing of the aspirational normative grounding of BHR.Footnote 9 Finally, it proposes an alternative framework grounded in prefigurative and agonistic approaches that seeks to reclaim the aspirational normative ambitions of the BHR field by stepping back from the UNGPs and opening up space for new, transformative directions.

II. Critical Issues with the UNGP Framework

This section highlights and investigates two critical issues with the UNGPs: their consensus-seeking tendencies and the erosion of BHR’s transformative normative foundations. While scholars have analysed other valid issues with the UNGPs such as exclusion of rightsholder voice,Footnote 10 challenges with implementation,Footnote 11 weaknesses in accountability,Footnote 12 failure to address root causes,Footnote 13 and marginalisation of Global South perspectives,Footnote 14 the focus on these two issues is deliberate; not because they are more significant than other critiques, but because they are especially relevant to the thought experiment explored in this article. The tendencies towards consensus seeking and shifting normative positionality act as an analytical lens to explore how the field has narrowed its focus to certain types of actions and goals, and why stepping away from the UNGPs, at least temporarily, might open space for reimagining alternatives.

A. Consensus-Seeking Tendencies

One of the UNGPs’ most frequently emphasised achievements is their widespread endorsement, which has driven a ‘global consensus’ among the private sector, governments, civil society organisations and the UN regarding the role of companies in the human rights agenda.Footnote 15 Ruggie claims that ‘thick stakeholder consensus helped pave the way for unanimous Human Rights Council Endorsement’.Footnote 16 However, critics have argued that this broad consensus was essentially ‘without content’,Footnote 17 achieved by giving disproportionate weight to powerful business perspectives while marginalising the voices of victims. By making consensus an overriding objective, the UNGPs appear to have sidestepped controversial issues in order to avoid disagreements among stakeholders. For example, they remain deliberately vague on the issue of governments’ extraterritorial obligations.Footnote 18 Rather than signalling substantive agreement, the UNGPs’ alleged consensus reflects a process that sidelines more confrontational perspectives. This is particularly evident at the UN Forum for Business and Human Rights, which was established to ‘discuss trends and challenges in the implementation of the Guiding Principles and promote dialogue and cooperation on issues linked to business and human rights’.Footnote 19 While the Forum is open to participation from a broad range of actors, its structure reflects the broader consensus-seeking orientation of the UNGPs. Some scholars have pointed out that rightsholders and critical scholars are routinely underrepresented on panels, and private sector voices are frequently foregrounded.Footnote 20 Dissent is not overtly suppressed, but rendered less visible through structural and discursive exclusions, allowing unresolved tensions to be reframed as agreement.Footnote 21

The ‘consensus attitude’ between corporations and the UN reflects a shift that occurred at the start of the where the dominant discourse moved away from viewing corporations as adversaries in the human rights sphere to positioning them as necessary partners in governance.Footnote 22 An earlier example of this shift can be seen in the UN Global Compact, which reframed corporate responsibility as an extension of global governance through voluntary business commitments.Footnote 23 This partnership approach, characterised by voluntary cooperation rather than regulatory enforcement, has been primarily supported by states and organisations in the Global North. Proponents of this partnership model claim it reflects a global consensus.Footnote 24 However, dissenting voices, particularly from the Global South, have critiqued it as a means of consolidating influence over human rights governance.Footnote 25

It is important here to reflect on and problematise the widespread endorsement or achievement of ‘consensus’ of the UNGPs. Is the number of endorsers and partnerships evidence of their success? Is consensus what we should be aiming for? What does consensus really mean? From an agonistic perspective, which is characterised by a, ‘deep skepticism of underscrutinized notions of public interest and the common good; a preference for the constructive role of contentious engagement over consensus-focused discourse; and a favorable view of discord as a reflection of the tumult of political life rather than as a problem to be overcome’, consensus indicates the existence of hegemonic power, the silencing of those with less power and a concealment of underlying conflict.Footnote 26 In other words, analysing the UNGPs with an agonistic lens reveals their hegemonic nature and exposes the power asymmetries that consensus tends to obscure. Under agonism, the goal is mutual understanding, while acknowledging power imbalances and different perspectives, realities and desires, and thereby recognising the inevitability of dissent.Footnote 27 While consensus can stifle innovation, growth and alternate perspectives, dissent may not signify a lack of progress. In fact, Nilsson and Fougére (2024) argue that ‘dissensus is a force for good’ in BHR and that ‘society benefits when conflict is explicitly acknowledged and accommodated’.Footnote 28

At another level, the stakeholder engagement approaches outlined in the UNGPs often encourage consensus-seeking.Footnote 29 While the UNGPs rightly emphasise engagement with affected stakeholders as a key mechanism for due diligence and remedial processes, in practice, many engagement processes have been critiqued as ‘instrumentalized, coopting agreement and cajoling consensus, despite local dissent’.Footnote 30 Such processes tend to marginalise more confrontational voices and reinforce existing power imbalances. Studies show that consensus-seeking engagements are often ‘structurally biased’ towards corporate and government actors, rendering the engagement encounter a rhetorical device.Footnote 31

B. Shifting Normative Foundations in BHR

From its inception, the field of BHR has been grounded in a normative commitment to the inherent dignity and inalienable rights of all human beings.Footnote 32 This foundation framed business responsibilities as moral imperatives rooted in international human rights law rather than as corporate voluntarism.Footnote 33 The adoption of the UNGPs in 2011 marked a turning point in the field. While Ruggie et al. (2021) claim that ‘The UNGPs are based on three normative pillars’, the UNGPs introduced a significant shift in normative emphasis, from aspirational, justice-based commitments to pragmatic, risk-based and procedural approaches shaped by political compromise and institutional feasibility.Footnote 34

However, to critically examine the erosion of normativity under the UNGPs, it is important to reflect on the various forms that normativity can take and their implications for BHR. Examples of different types of normativity include aspirational, procedural and pragmatic normativity.Footnote 35 Failing to recognise the differences between forms of normativity can obscure the impacts of governance frameworks that favour certain approaches, such as procedural, risk-based normativity, over others, like aspirational or transformative justice-based normativity. Rather than being devoid of normativity, one could argue that the UNGPs embody a form of procedural and managerial normativity rooted in institutional feasibility and risk management, treating human rights as risks to be managed, rather than as values to be upheld.Footnote 36

While the UNGPs undeniably brought coherence, legitimacy and visibility to a field that was previously fragmented, with varying approaches to corporate responsibility and limited institutional access, this coherence came at a cost.Footnote 37 By institutionalising a singular consensus-oriented approach, the UNGPs have narrowed the space for more critical, redistributive and justice-oriented visions of corporate accountability. In doing so, they contributed to a shift in the field’s normative orientation, which was once characterised by a plurality of commitments to human rights, equity and system change. What remains today is a more procedural, risk-oriented approach that risks marginalising the aspirational and justice-driven tendencies that once helped define the field’s potential.Footnote 38

The pragmatic positioning of the UNGPs is what made them so accessible and appealing to private sector actors, but this pragmatism has also shaped implementation in ways that favour procedural over transformative approaches.Footnote 39 In other words, the UNGPs’ flexibility and feasibility have tended to normalise a form of procedural normativity in which complying with processes becomes the goal, rather than advancing substantive human rights outcomes. For example, Human Rights Due Diligence (HRDD) exemplifies this procedural turn. Although developed as a mechanism for identifying and addressing harm, in practice, HRDD often amounts to superficial audits and disclosure reports that meet formal expectations without meaningfully transforming business operations or addressing root causes of harm.Footnote 40 Landau refers to this as ‘cosmetic compliance,’ where firms convey ‘the appearance of taking action’ while failing to reduce their human rights impacts. ‘The UNGPs envision a “corporate responsibility to respect human rights” but not to advance human rights’.Footnote 41 This more limited and procedural approach to corporate accountability contrasts with earlier aspirations in the field to reimagine accountability through rights-based, distributive, justice-driven structures.Footnote 42

We recognise that prior to the UNGPs, the field’s pluralism limited the perceived legitimacy of the field and constrained its influence on corporate and state behaviour.Footnote 43 Yet, this same pluralism may have enabled space for more critical, experimental and transformative approaches to emerge and evolve. These approaches are increasingly constrained under the dominant procedural paradigm institutionalised by the UNGPs, where audits and disclosures now define due diligence itself, replacing the broader normative aspirations they were initially designed to advance. This pragmatic shift mirrors the ‘pragmatic turn’, where the UNGPs prioritised institutional feasibility over transformative normative commitments, leading to an approach that appears ‘principled’ but is ultimately shaped by political and corporate constraints, repackaging human rights into market-friendly frameworks.Footnote 44 As Backer warns, the result is ‘a creature stillborn’: a framework that appears legitimate but lacks the normative force needed to drive systemic change.Footnote 45

III. Why ‘Taking a Break’ is Necessary—‘from Pragmatic to Prefigurative’

As the previous sections have shown, the UNGPs’ emphasis on consensus and pragmatic feasibility has constrained the political imagination of the BHR field and shifted its normative grounding. While many early voices in the field grounded business responsibilities in international human rights law and aspirational ideals of justice, equity and rightsholder empowerment, others pursued more incremental, pragmatic strategies of corporate accountability.Footnote 46 These divergent tendencies, those leaning towards transformative ideals and those favouring procedural pragmatism, have long coexisted in dynamic tension, with their balance of influence shifting over time. More recently, we see a consolidation of the procedural strand, with the UNGPs and their pragmatism increasingly functioning as the default framework and orientation for the field. Even critiques, in a sense, reinforce the centrality of the UNGPs. In this context, taking a break from the UNGPs is not a call to dismiss their contributions. Rather, it is a recognition of this growing imbalance and the need to create analytical space for approaches that acknowledge and engage with conflict and disagreement, as well as for strategies that are implementable in the present while remaining anchored in the transformative futures they seek. In the next section, we turn to such alternatives by drawing on prefigurative politics and agonistic pluralism to explore how the field might be reoriented around plurality and normative aspirations. These directions are not presented as new templates or constraints, but rather as invitations to think and act differently.

IV. Prefiguring Forward: New Frameworks for Business and Human Rights

A. From Consensus Goals to Agonistic Pluralism Goals

If we shift consensus-seeking tendencies towards a more agonistic approach that acknowledges the inevitability of dissent and conflict, we can build structures and processes that enable us to work within those contexts without silencing voices to claim we have reached ‘consensus’.Footnote 47 Developing these frameworks will not be a straightforward process. However, engaging different rightsholders as well as agonistic frameworks such as the critical dialogic accounting and accountability (CDAA) framework can support this development. Critical accounting scholars developed CDAA to challenge conventional accountability and accounting models that prioritise compliance and standardised metrics.Footnote 48 CDAA is grounded in dialogic theory and the tradition of dialogic action, which serves as a tool for transforming reality through dialogic encounters that embrace dissent, confront structural power and foster emancipatory engagement.Footnote 49 Instead of reinforcing existing power structures, CDAA promotes accountability as an ongoing participatory process that aims to amplify the voices of marginalised individuals by acknowledging power asymmetries and developing engagement structures accordingly.Footnote 50 CDAA democratises accountability by foregrounding the contestable, bringing it into public discourse and constructing systems that enable underrepresented groups to shape the terms of engagement. Rather than building systems around what is easily measured or implemented, CDAA asks whose voices are excluded, whose interests are prioritised, and how accountability structures can be designed to enable rightsholder agency in the contexts of power asymmetries. It does not treat dissent as a barrier to progress but as a condition for meaningful accountability.Footnote 51

This shift towards more agonistic forms of accountability is not meant to suggest that the UNGPs are inherently incompatible with such forms of accountability. Rather, the UNGPs, by design, prioritise procedural feasibility and consensus at a high level, ‘dominated by top-down approaches’,Footnote 52 which tends to constrain what becomes possible or prioritised at more granular levels of implementation. When consensus is a top-level guiding orientation, it can hinder the development of more participatory and dissent-accommodating frameworks, such as CDAA, at the operational level. While the UNGPs promote stakeholder engagement and encourage due diligence processes, they do not provide the concrete structures, guidance, or enforcement mechanisms necessary to ensure that the outcome of these processes reflects the lived realities, power imbalances and priorities of affected rightsholders.Footnote 53 Their emphasis on flexibility and business feasibility often results in procedures that are easily adopted by companies but do not disrupt existing power relations or enable space for more bottom-up, participatory accountability models. As a result, the framework remains largely procedural and business-centric, offering little in the way of structural support to foster truly participatory, power-sensitive approaches to corporate accountability.Footnote 54

A relevant idea from the CDAA scholarship is the shift from accounting-based accountability to accountability-based accounting. In the former, systems of accountability are dictated by existing accounting standards, privileging quantitative metrics and corporate interests. On the other hand, accountability-based accounting develops systems that prioritise marginalised voices and contextual realities, acknowledging unavoidable power asymmetries and embedding human rights concerns and participatory approaches at their core.Footnote 55 This shift is political because it challenges whose knowledge is valued and whose interests shape the rules.Footnote 56 For example, in a CDAA-based intervention in Bangladesh, researchers worked with a microfinance NGO and women borrowers to redesign accountability practices. Through a series of participatory sessions, women collectively produced counter-narratives and employed storytelling to expose how existing microfinance systems overlooked their lived experiences and perpetuated patriarchal structures. They demanded more inclusive decision-making, such as requiring urban board members to visit rural communities and engage with their realities, and called for training programs aligned with their economic and social needs, rather than loan disbursement metrics. Their sessions did not aim for consensus, but legitimised disagreement and created dialogic spaces where women could redefine accountability on their own terms.Footnote 57

Rightsholder-driven approaches grounded in CDAA principles should enable more authentic dialogue, localised accountability structures and a deeper conception of corporate responsibility that engages with pluralism and conflict.Footnote 58 This approach does not aim to eliminate power asymmetries, as it acknowledges their entrenched and structural nature. Instead, it seeks to build systems and processes that enable inclusive operations and engagement in contexts of power imbalance. The next section will explore one such agonistic system and begin to extrapolate from its principles a broader normative and organisational shift for BHR.

B. Worker-Driven Social Responsibility

Worker-driven Social Responsibility (WSR) is an alternative model of labour governance that shifts power dynamics within supply chains by centring on workers’ monitoring and enforcement of their own rights. Rather than relying on top-down audits and external standard-setting bodies, WSR relies on worker-driven audits as part of a larger remedial system to monitor and enforce rights grounded in education and enforcement.Footnote 59 WSR is based on legally binding agreements between worker organisations and corporate buyers at the top of supply chains. These agreements establish enforceable labour standards, grievance mechanisms and monitoring protocols that are all grounded in worker input, oversight and enforcement. They typically require participating buyers who have signed the agreement to purchase only from suppliers that comply with the agreed standards and agree to independent monitoring. If suppliers violate the standards, brands are obligated to suspend or terminate their business relationships, resulting in significant market consequences for non-compliance.Footnote 60 In this way, the agreements bind both brands and suppliers to worker-driven standards, giving workers meaningful control over monitoring and enforcement.

Another strength of WSR, which makes it a suitable framework for reimagining BHR, is its adaptability. The first operational WSR program is the Fair Food Program (FFP); however, there are now WSR programs in various industries and geographies around the globe, including dairy, apparel, fishing, construction and flowers, spanning four continents. It is continuing to attract interest from other sectors around the globe.Footnote 61 There are core WSR principles rooted in Freirien critical dialogic approaches and ‘outlined by the WSR Network, a collaboration between worker organizations (including the CIW), allies and technical advisors’, but there are no universal standards and monitoring processes as for other labour governance initiatives.Footnote 62 The WSR principles are: ‘Labor rights must be worker driven, obligations for global corporations must be binding and enforceable, buyers must afford suppliers the financial incentive and capacity to comply, consequences for non-compliant suppliers must be mandatory, gains for workers must be measurable and timely, verification of workplace compliance must be rigorous and independent’.Footnote 63

Each WSR initiative is developed differently depending on the particular context. When developing a WSR initiative, the process focuses on investigating who has power and how that power can be somewhat harnessed, whose voice is not being heard, and how power can be redirected to ensure their voices are heard. The process focuses on empowering workers to understand their critical role in a supply chain and using their voice to create the standards necessary for dignified work.Footnote 64

WSR offers an example of how agonistic pluralism can be operationalised in labour rights governance. It institutionalises power struggles by embedding worker-driven mechanisms into corporate accountability structures.Footnote 65 CDAA scholarship helps to clarify this point: WSR is an example of an agonistic system of engagement that does not presume shared interests or parity of power, but instead constructs mechanisms through which actors with less power can contest and meaningfully shape the terms of accountability.Footnote 66 WSR programs involve dialogic negotiation processes, such as regular obligatory meetings with workers, supervisors and employers. Compromise is a part of the engagements in these meetings, but it is not consensus-oriented; rather, it aims towards a mutual understanding of differing needs and desires.Footnote 67 WSR programs leverage enforceable agreements and market consequences to restructure how decisions are made and whose interests define standards, shape oversight and drive accountability responses.

WSR programs also resonate with critical accounting scholars’ call for ‘pragmatic goals for the present need to be accompanied by revolutionary programs for the future’.Footnote 68 WSR programs operate pragmatically within a neoliberal context, yet they are transformative in their redistribution of power from corporations to workers and in their capacity to protect and remediate rights along the supply chain.Footnote 69 In other words, WSR is not only an example of an agonistic approach, but also a prefigurative one. It does not wait for ideal conditions to redistribute power or defer justice to some future horizon. It acts now, using the tools of the present, such as brands’ massive buying power, to build the futures it envisions, in which workers have the power to define, protect and remediate their own rights.Footnote 70

While this may seem to reflect the ‘principled pragmatism’ of the UNGPs, WSR’s approach is grounded in a different conception of pragmatism. Rather than reining in ambition in order to achieve consensus, WSR uses pragmatic tools as a means to advance transformative ends.Footnote 71 Its pragmatism is a strategy to embed transformative goals within existing power structures by radically redistributing who sets standards and who holds power.Footnote 72 This approach reframes pragmatism as an opportunity to experiment with new models that reflect rightsholder-driven commitments. In the next section, we extrapolate from the principles and practices of WSR to outline a broader normative and organisational shift, prefigurative BHR, which aims to reclaim the field’s transformative aspirations.

C. Prefigurative Business and Human Rights

Emerging from social movement and governance literatures, prefigurative politics refers to practices that aim to align present actions with future aspirations.Footnote 73 Prefigurative approaches refuse to defer justice to some future ideal and instead insist on enacting alternative ways of being, relating and organising in the here and now.Footnote 74 In other words, prefigurative politics refuse to allow present constraints to define the terms of justice. Instead, it aligns both the means and the ends of political and institutional change, grounding long-term aspirational visions of the future in immediately implementable structures. It refuses to allow the pragmatic to displace the possible. Where the UNGPs’ ‘principled pragmatism’ often prioritises consensus and feasibility within existing power structures, prefigurative approaches begin from a different starting point: not by asking what is possible within the current system, but by asking what structures are needed to realise a more just future and begin to build them now.Footnote 75 This approach does not reject pragmatism but reframes it: not as a reason to narrow ambition, but as an opportunity to experiment with new models that reflect transformative commitments from the outset.

By integrating these insights, the proposed prefigurative BHR provides an alternate vision of the BHR agenda that is not structured or limited by the UNGPs but addresses fundamental critiques identified earlier in this paper:

  1. 1. Abandoning the valorisation of consensus and consensus-seeking tendencies—Prefigurative BHR rejects consensus as the normative ideal and instead embraces conflict and contestation as generative forces for institutional and normative change. It builds upon frameworks like CDAA and WSR, which institutionalise struggle through participatory processes that surface disagreement and power imbalances rather than suppress them. Agonistic pluralism helps illuminate this shift by acknowledging that actors do not share interests or equal power.Footnote 76 It opens up the possibility for governance models that do not presume alignment but instead build space for negotiation and contestation, foregrounding unequal power and centring those most affected. Prefigurative BHR does not seek to manage disagreement. Instead, it acknowledges conflict as foundational and builds institutional mechanisms that allow those most affected, who have historically had little power, to challenge dominant interests and reshape the terms of engagement.Footnote 77

  2. 2. The return of aspirational and transformative normativity—Prefigurative BHR re-centres normativity on the aspirational and transformative dimensions by restoring the alignment between means and ends. Rather than diluting long-term goals to fit short-term feasibility, it insists that today’s strategies must reflect the just futures we aim to build. It does not accept the premise that pragmatism requires the abandonment of ambition. Instead, it leverages existing instruments such as binding agreements, participatory governance structures and market pressure to build structures that reflect the field’s foundational commitment to dignity, equity, accountability and justice.

Prefigurative BHR puts forward a renewed normative foundation for the field. Unlike the UNGPs’ due diligence approach, which aims to minimise disruption to business operations,Footnote 78 a prefigurative approach would deliberately surface conflict and refigure whose interests define what counts as harm, compliance, or remedy. If we take our thought experiment seriously and take a break from the UNGPs, prefigurative approaches open up new spaces for experimentation, where the future of BHR is both imagined and actively built in the present.

V. Conclusion: The Beginning of the Next Chapter in BHR

As the BHR field matures, it is important to critically reflect on the frameworks and assumptions that have guided its development. While the UNGPs have played a pivotal role in clarifying state obligations and corporate responsibilities, their widespread adoption has also constrained innovation, reinforcing a pragmatic, consensus-driven approach that risks sidelining more transformative possibilities.Footnote 79 This paper has argued that stepping back from the UNGPs, even temporarily, could create space to explore alternative models that re-centre the field’s transformative potential. This includes reclaiming aspirational normativity and learning from conflict, disagreement and dissent rather than suppressing them in the name of consensus. Embracing disagreement as a condition of justice can create a generative space for accountability practices that confront power, rather than ignoring it.Footnote 80

Prefigurative approaches to BHR offer one possible direction. Drawing from WSR, Agonistic Pluralism, Critical Dialogic Accountability, and prefigurative politics to reimagine engagement, accountability and enforcement through practices that live the future now, having ‘pragmatic goals for the present and revolutionary aims for the future’.Footnote 81 This reminds us that it is not a matter of choosing between pragmatism and transformation, but of holding both simultaneously: building practical mechanisms that reflect revolutionary commitments.

However, we are not suggesting that it is not the only possible path forward. Alternative perspectives, such as models of shared or collective responsibility or those grounded in Indigenous philosophies, also offer ways to reimagine approaches to BHR.Footnote 82 A diversity of approaches will be necessary to ensure that the next chapter of BHR reflects the complexity of power and responsibility in our world. Additionally, alternative approaches such as prefigurative BHR may one day operate alongside the UNGPs. However, a temporary step back would create space to reimagine the ends and the means of BHR in a way that re-anchors the field in the transformative ambitions that first ignited it.

Rather than refining the existing framework, the future of BHR should be defined by an openness to new approaches that challenge entrenched power dynamics and move beyond compliance-based solutions. The field must critically engage with its own limitations and avoid mistaking broad consensus for meaningful progress. By drawing from alternative governance models, accountability frameworks, and prefigurative politics, BHR can reclaim its aspirational and justice-driven foundations. If, as Ruggie wrote, the UNGPs marked ‘the end of the beginning’, then perhaps the next chapter of BHR requires more than incremental adjustments to an existing framework.Footnote 83 Rather, it requires a willingness to step back, rethink and reimagine a renewed normative ambition, along with an openness to dissent as a site of ethical and political possibility.

Use of AI

I used AI-assisted tools solely for proofreading and formatting, including Grammarly and ChatGPT 5.

Financial support

No funding was received to assist with the preparation of this manuscript.

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