[Federal Register Volume 72, Number 247 (Thursday, December 27, 2007)]
[Notices]
[Pages 73374-73379]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E7-25036]


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DEPARTMENT OF LABOR

Office of the Secretary


Notice of Procedural Guidelines for the Development and 
Maintenance of the List of Goods From Countries Produced by Child Labor 
or Forced Labor; Request for Information

AGENCY: Bureau of International Labor Affairs, Department of Labor.

ACTION: Notice of procedural guidelines for the development and 
maintenance of a list of goods from countries produced by child labor 
or forced labor in violation of international standards; Request for 
information.

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SUMMARY: This notice sets forth final procedural guidelines 
(``Guidelines'') for the development and maintenance of a list of goods 
from countries that the Bureau of International Labor Affairs 
(``ILAB'') has reason to believe are produced by child labor or forced 
labor in violation of international standards (``List''). The 
Guidelines establish the process for public submission of information, 
and the evaluation and reporting process to be used by the U.S. 
Department of Labor's (``DOL'') Office of Child Labor, Forced Labor, 
and Human Trafficking (``Office'') in maintaining and updating the 
List. DOL is required to develop and make available to the public the 
List pursuant to the Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act 
of 2005. This notice also requests information on the use of child 
labor and/or forced labor in the production of goods internationally, 
as well as information on government, industry, or third-party actions 
and initiatives to address these problems. This information will be 
used by DOL as appropriate in developing the initial List.

DATES: This document is effective immediately upon publication of this 
notice. Information submitted in response to this notice must be 
received by the Office no later than March 26, 2008. Information 
received after that date may not be taken into consideration in 
developing DOL's initial List, but such information will be considered 
by the Office as the List is maintained and updated in the future.

TO SUBMIT INFORMATION, OR FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, CONTACT: Director, 
Office of Child Labor, Forced Labor, and Human Trafficking, Bureau of 
International Labor Affairs, U.S. Department of Labor at (202) 693-4843 
(this is not a toll-free number). Information may be submitted by the 
following methods:
     Facsimile (fax): ILAB/Office of Child Labor, Forced Labor, 
and Human Trafficking at 202-693-4830.
     Mail, Express Delivery, Hand Delivery, and Messenger 
Service: Charita Castro or Rachel Rigby at U.S. Department of Labor, 
ILAB/Office of Child Labor, Forced Labor, and Human Trafficking, 200 
Constitution Ave., NW., Room S-5317, Washington, DC 20210.
     E-mail: [email protected].

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Section 105(b)(1) of the Trafficking Victims 
Protection Reauthorization Act of 2005 (``TVPRA of 2005''), Public Law 
109-164 (2006), directed the Secretary of Labor, acting through the 
Bureau of International Labor Affairs, to ``carry out additional 
activities to monitor and combat forced labor and child labor in 
foreign countries.'' Section 105(b)(2) of the TVPRA, 22 U.S.C. 
7112(b)(2), listed these activities as:
    (A) Monitor the use of forced labor and child labor in violation of 
international standards;
    (B) Provide information regarding trafficking in persons for the 
purpose of forced labor to the Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking 
of the Department of State for inclusion in [the] trafficking in 
persons report required by section 110(b) of the Trafficking Victims 
Protection Act of 2000 (22 U.S.C. 7107(b));
    (C) Develop and make available to the public a list of goods from 
countries that the Bureau of International Labor Affairs has reason to 
believe are produced by forced labor or child labor in violation of 
international standards;
    (D) Work with persons who are involved in the production of goods 
on the list described in subparagraph (C) to create a standard set of 
practices that will reduce the likelihood that such persons will 
produce goods using the labor described in such subparagraph; and
    (E) Consult with other departments and agencies of the United 
States Government to reduce forced and child labor internationally and 
ensure that products made by forced labor and child labor in violation 
of international standards are not imported into the United States.
    The Office carries out the DOL mandates in the TVPRA. These 
Guidelines provide the framework for ILAB's implementation of the TVPRA 
mandate, and establish procedures for the submission and review of 
information and the process for developing and maintaining the List. In 
addition to the Office's efforts under the TVPRA, the Office conducts 
and publishes research on child labor and forced labor worldwide. The 
Office consults such sources as DOL's Findings on the Worst Forms of 
Child Labor; the Department of State's annual Country Reports on Human 
Rights Practices and Trafficking in Persons Reports; reports by 
governmental, non-governmental, and international organizations; and 
reports by academic and research institutions and other sources.
    In addition to reviewing information submitted by the public in 
response to this Notice, the Office will also conduct a public hearing 
to gather information to assist in the development of the List. The 
Office will evaluate all information received according to the 
processes outlined in these Guidelines. Goods that meet the criteria 
outlined in these Guidelines will be placed on an initial List, 
published in the Federal Register and on the DOL Web site. DOL intends 
to maintain and update the List over time, through its own research, 
interagency consultations, and additional public submissions of 
information. Procedures for the ongoing maintenance of the List, and 
key terms used in these Guidelines, are described in detail below.

[[Page 73375]]

Public Comments

    On October 1, 2007, ILAB published a Federal Register notice of 
proposed procedural guidelines, requesting public comments on the 
proposed guidelines (72 FR 55808 (Oct. 1, 2007)). The notice provided a 
30-day period for submitting written comments, which closed on Oct. 31, 
2007. Written comments were received from nine parties. Several of the 
comments strongly supported the Department's efforts to combat child 
labor and forced labor. All of the comments were given careful 
consideration and where appropriate, changes were made to the 
Guidelines. The comments and any revisions to the proposed Guidelines 
are explained in detail below.

A. Comments Concerning the Office's Evaluation of Information

    Several commenters questioned the Department's decision to consider 
information up to seven years old. One commenter asserted that even 
one-year-old information should be considered too dated to be relevant. 
The Department appreciates the importance of using up-to-date 
information. It is also the Office's experience that the use of child 
labor and forced labor in a country or in the production of a 
particular good typically persists for several years, particularly when 
no meaningful action is taken to combat it. Information about such 
activities is often actively concealed. Information that is several 
years old therefore can provide useful context for more current 
information. The Office will consider the date of all available 
information, and, as stated in the proposed Guidelines, ``more current 
information will generally be given priority.''
    One commenter questioned how the Office would treat information on 
government efforts to combat the use of child labor and forced labor, 
stating that where a government undertakes voluntary efforts to 
regulate the production of goods and/or prosecutes incidents of child 
labor or forced labor, such government initiatives should not result in 
designating a particular good on the List. In response, the Office 
affirms the important role of government law enforcement, as well as 
other government, private sector, and third-party voluntary actions and 
initiatives to combat child labor and forced labor such as company and 
industry codes of conduct. However, the Office notes that some 
voluntary actions, as with some enforcement actions, are more effective 
than others. For example, some prosecutions may result in minimal or 
suspended sentences for the responsible parties, and some voluntary 
actions by government, industry, or third parties, may be ineffective 
in combating the violative labor practices at issue. Accordingly, in 
determining whether to include a good and country on the List, the 
Office will consider particularly relevant and probative any available 
evidence of government, industry, and third-party actions and 
initiatives that are effective in significantly reducing if not 
eliminating child labor and forced labor.
    Two commenters questioned why the Office would not consider 
confidential information in a submission, with one commenter stating 
that a submitter should have the option of providing information 
containing confidential information to the Office while also providing 
a redacted version for public release. In response, the Office has 
clarified its handling of submissions containing confidential, 
personal, or classified information. In the interest of maintaining a 
transparent process, the Office will not accept classified information 
in developing the List. The Office may request that any such 
information brought to its attention be declassified. The Office will 
accept submissions containing confidential or personal information, but 
pursuant to applicable laws and regulations may redact such submissions 
before making them publicly available.

B. Comments Concerning the List of Goods and Countries

    Several commenters questioned why the List includes raw materials 
and/or components directly produced using child labor and forced labor, 
but not final goods made in part (indirectly produced) with such 
materials or components. Another commenter suggested that any final 
good produced indirectly with child labor or forced labor at any point 
in its production chain should be placed on the List, and that the List 
should specify where in the production chain the child labor or forced 
labor occurred. While the Office appreciates the importance of tracking 
raw materials or components produced in violation of international 
child labor or forced labor standards through the production chain, the 
difficulty of accurately conducting such tracking places it beyond the 
scope of these Guidelines. Ideally, the Office would have access to 
public information that would permit the comprehensive tracking of raw 
materials and component parts in the global supply chain, but the 
Office is unaware of any such publicly available information. Moreover, 
the Office is aware that many goods used as raw materials or components 
in the production of other goods may be sourced from multiple locations 
within a country or even from several different countries. 
Consequently, it would likely be extremely difficult to develop 
reliable information on the final destination or use of every good 
produced with child labor or forced labor. Inasmuch as the primary 
purpose of the List is to promote efforts at the country level to 
combat child labor and forced labor, that purpose is best served by 
identifying goods directly produced with child labor and forced labor. 
The Office observes that nothing in these Guidelines would prevent a 
member of the public from tracking the final destination or use of any 
good on the List.
    Several commenters requested that the List name individual 
companies using child labor or forced labor, with two commenters 
suggesting that this practice would protect entities that do not use 
child labor or forced labor in their supply chains, or that might 
otherwise unknowingly trade in such goods. One commenter suggested 
that, in addition to listing goods and countries, the Office name 
industries using such goods. Another commenter suggested that the 
Office distinguish among individual factories within a country on the 
List, to ensure that goods not produced with child labor or forced 
labor are not subject to the same treatment as goods that are so 
produced. Another commenter suggested that the Department hold 
individual violators publicly accountable.
    The TVPRA mandated a List of goods and countries, not company or 
industry names. It would be immensely difficult for the Office to 
attempt to track the identity of every company and industry using a 
good produced with child labor or forced labor. In addition, it is the 
Office's experience that child labor and forced labor frequently occur 
in small local enterprises, for which company names, if they are 
available, have little relevance. The Office is also aware that it is 
often a simple matter to change or conceal the name of a company. 
Consequently, the Office has concluded that seeking to track and name 
individual companies would be of limited value to the primary purpose 
of the List, which is to promote ameliorative efforts at the country 
level. Moreover, holding individual violators accountable would exceed 
the mandate of the TVPRA of 2005. However, the TVPRA of 2005 requires 
that the Department work with persons who are involved in the 
production of goods on the List to create a standard set of

[[Page 73376]]

practices to reduce the likelihood that such persons will produce goods 
using such labor. The Department intends to work with such persons once 
the initial List is developed.

C. Comments Concerning the Development and Maintenance of the List

    One commenter suggested that the List be updated at regular 
intervals, and at least annually. Another commenter noted that the 
proposed Guidelines do not set a limit on how long a good may remain on 
the List, or a time period within which DOL must review the designation 
of a particular good. The Office anticipates that the addition, 
maintenance, or removal of an item on the List will be driven largely 
by the availability of accurate information. The Office will conduct 
its own research on goods produced with child labor and forced labor, 
and anticipates that additional information used to develop and 
maintain the List will be provided by the public. Consequently, the 
Office considers it a more efficient use of resources to re-examine 
goods on the List as pertinent information becomes available, rather 
than adhering to a fixed review schedule.
    One commenter suggested that the Office provide a fixed time period 
within which it will decide whether to accept a submission of 
information. The Office has revised section B.3 of the Guidelines to 
remove the possibility that a submission of information will not be 
accepted. All submissions of information (with the exception of those 
containing classified information) will be accepted and evaluated for 
their relevance and probative value.
    One commenter suggested that the Guidelines provide that the Office 
make a final determination whether to place a good on the List within a 
specific timeframe, such as within 120 days of receiving the 
submission. Although the Office intends to expedite its evaluation of 
any information submitted in response to this notice, it cannot 
guarantee that the Office's evaluation of a particular submission will 
be completed within a set timeframe. Some submissions may require 
further investigation by the Office, and other submissions may result 
in responsive submissions by other parties. Setting a fixed deadline 
may result in the inclusion or exclusion of a good on the List without 
the most comprehensive review possible.
    One commenter suggested that before an entry is removed from the 
List, the Office should publish a notice in the Federal Register 
announcing its intention to consider removal of the entry and giving 
interested parties an opportunity to comment. The Office does not 
intend to provide advance notice before an item is added to or removed 
from the List; however, if information is submitted that tends to 
support a change to the List, that information will be publicly 
available on the Office's Web site and will provide notice to the 
public that the status of a particular good is under review. Moreover, 
the Office retains the discretion to request additional information 
from time to time concerning a particular good; such a request will 
also provide notice to the public that the status of a good is under 
active consideration.
    One commenter suggested that the Office ensure that any information 
indicating a possible violation of U.S. law is referred to an 
appropriate law enforcement agency. The Department has well-established 
procedures for the referral of information indicating a possible 
violation of U.S. laws to appropriate law enforcement agencies, and 
these procedures will be followed throughout the development and 
maintenance of the List.

D. Comments Concerning Definitions and Terms

    Two commenters were concerned about the definitions of child labor 
and forced labor in the proposed Guidelines, questioning why they did 
not expressly reference International Labor Organization (ILO) 
conventions addressing child labor and forced labor. The commenters 
questioned why there were apparent differences between the definitions 
of terms in the proposed Guidelines and the corresponding definitions 
in the relevant ILO conventions. The Office has carefully considered 
these comments. Consequently, the definitions used in the final 
Guidelines have been revised to clarify that the Office will apply 
international standards.
    Four commenters questioned the use of the terms ``significant 
incidence'' and ``isolated incident'' in the proposed Guidelines. One 
commenter raised an apparent inconsistency between the terms 
``significant,'' ``prevalent,'' and ``pattern of practice,'' in the 
proposed Guidelines' description of the amount of evidence that would 
weigh in favor of a finding that a particular good is produced in 
violation of international standards. Another commenter stated that the 
terms ``significant'' and ``prevalent'' provide inadequate guidance, 
because they do not address the percentage of workplaces in a country 
producing a particular good in violation of international standards, or 
whether a good produced in one location represents a large or small 
share of a country's total exports of the good. One commenter 
recommended that the terms ``significant'' and ``prevalent'' be 
replaced with ``recurring.'' Another commenter recommended that a more 
precise guideline be developed with respect to how much child labor or 
forced labor warrants the placement of a good on the List. One final 
commenter on this issue suggested that a good be removed from the List 
only if the use of child labor or forced labor is ``insignificant,'' 
stating that that term is more precise than the terms used in the 
proposed Guidelines.
    It is neither possible nor useful to precisely quantify the amount 
or percentage of child labor or forced labor that will be considered 
``significant,'' since what is considered ``significant'' will vary 
with a number of other factors. For that reason, the Guidelines provide 
that a ``significant incidence'' of child labor or forced labor 
occurring in the production of a particular good is only one among 
several factors that would be weighed before a good is added to, or 
removed from, the List. Other factors include whether the situation 
described meets the definitions of child labor or forced labor; the 
probative value of the evidence submitted; the date and source(s) of 
the information; and the extent to which the information is 
corroborated. The Guidelines also make clear that the Office will 
consider any available evidence of government, industry, and third-
party actions and initiatives that are effective in significantly 
reducing if not eliminating child labor and forced labor. However, in 
response to these comments, the Office has decided to clarify the 
nature of the information sought by deleting the use of the term 
``prevalent.'' The Office will also change the phrase, ``pattern of 
practice,'' to ``pattern or practice.'' The suggested terms 
``recurring'' or ``insignificant'' provide no additional precision.
    Two commenters requested that the goods on the List be identified 
as specifically as possible, to avoid confusion with similar goods that 
have not been produced using child labor or forced labor in violation 
of international standards. Some commenters suggested that the List use 
product codes developed for the Harmonized Tariff Schedule (HTS), 
reasoning that the use of such codes would both provide more 
specificity and improve interagency consultation. The Office intends to 
identify all goods on the List as specifically as possible, depending 
on available information. However, parties submitting information on a 
particular

[[Page 73377]]

good may not have the necessary expertise to properly utilize the 
product codes developed for the HTS.
    Another commenter suggested that the Office specifically include 
agricultural commodities in the definition of ``goods.'' The Office 
considers that the term ``goods'' includes agricultural products and 
the definition of ``produced'' in the Guidelines expressly covers goods 
that are harvested or farmed.

Final Procedural Guidelines

A. Sources of Information and Factors Considered in the Development and 
Maintenance of the List

    The Office will make use of all relevant information, whether 
gathered through research, public submissions of information, a public 
hearing, interagency consultations, or other means, in developing the 
List. In the interest of maintaining a transparent process, the Office 
will not accept classified information in developing the List. The 
Office may request that any such information brought to its attention 
be declassified. If submissions contain confidential or personal 
information, the Office may redact such information in accordance with 
applicable laws and regulations before making the submission available 
to the public.
    In evaluating information, the Office will consider and weigh 
several factors, including:
    1. Nature of information. Whether the information about child labor 
or forced labor gathered from research, public submissions, hearing 
testimony, or other sources is relevant and probative, and meets the 
definitions of child labor or forced labor.
    2. Date of information. Whether the information about child labor 
or forced labor in the production of the good(s) is no more than 7 
years old at the time of receipt. More current information will 
generally be given priority, and information older than 7 years will 
generally not be considered.
    3. Source of information. Whether the information, either from 
primary or secondary sources, is from a source whose methodology, prior 
publications, degree of familiarity and experience with international 
labor standards, and/or reputation for accuracy and objectivity, 
warrants a determination that it is relevant and probative.
    4. Extent of corroboration. The extent to which the information 
about the use of child labor or forced labor in the production of a 
good(s) is corroborated by other sources.
    5. Significant incidence of child labor or forced labor. Whether 
the information about the use of child labor or forced labor in the 
production of a good(s) warrants a determination that the incidence of 
such practices is significant in the country in question. Information 
that relates only to a single company or facility; or that indicates an 
isolated incident of child labor or forced labor, will ordinarily not 
weigh in favor of a finding that a good is produced in violation of 
international standards. Information that demonstrates a significant 
incidence of child labor or forced labor in the production of a 
particular good(s), although not necessarily representing a pattern or 
practice in the industry as a whole, will ordinarily weigh in favor of 
a finding that a good is produced in violation of international 
standards.
    In determining which goods and countries are to be placed on the 
List, the Office will, as appropriate, take into consideration the 
stages in the chain of a good's production. Whether a good is placed on 
the List may depend on which stage of production used child labor or 
forced labor. For example, if child labor or forced labor was only used 
in the extraction, harvesting, assembly, or production of raw materials 
or component articles, and these materials or articles are subsequently 
used under non-violative conditions in the manufacture or processing of 
a final good, only the raw materials/component articles and the 
country/ies where they were extracted, harvested, assembled, or 
produced, as appropriate, may be placed on the List. If child labor or 
forced labor was used in both the production or extraction of raw 
materials/component articles and the manufacture or processing of a 
final good, then both the raw materials/component articles and the 
final good, and the country/ies in which such labor was used, may be 
placed on the List. This is to ensure a direct correspondence between 
the goods and countries which appear on the List, and the use of child 
labor or forced labor.
    Information on government, industry, or third-party actions and 
initiatives to combat child labor or forced labor will be taken into 
consideration, although they are not necessarily sufficient in and of 
themselves to prevent a good and country from being listed. In 
evaluating such information, the Office will consider particularly 
relevant and probative any evidence of government, industry, and third-
party actions and initiatives that are effective in significantly 
reducing if not eliminating child labor and forced labor.
    Goods and countries (``entries'') that meet the criteria outlined 
in these procedural Guidelines will be placed on an initial List, to be 
published in the Federal Register and on the DOL Web site. This initial 
List will continue to be updated as additional information becomes 
available. Before publication of the initial List or subsequent 
versions of the List, the Office will inform the relevant foreign 
governments of their presence on the List and request their responses. 
The Office will review these responses and make a determination as to 
their relevance. The List, along with a listing of the sources used to 
identify the goods and countries on it, will be published in the 
Federal Register and on the DOL Web site. The List will represent DOL's 
conclusions based on all relevant information available at the time of 
publication.
    For each entry, the List will indicate whether the good is made 
using child labor, forced labor, or both. As the List continues to be 
maintained and updated, the List will also indicate the date when each 
entry was included. The List will not include any company or individual 
names. DOL's postings on its website of source material used in 
identifying goods and countries on the List will be redacted to remove 
company or individual names, and other confidential material, pursuant 
to applicable laws and regulations.

B. Procedures for the Maintenance of the List

    1. Following publication of the initial List, the Office will 
periodically review and update the List, as appropriate. The Office 
conducts ongoing research and monitoring of child labor and forced 
labor, and if relevant information is obtained through such research, 
the Office may add an entry to, or remove an entry from the List using 
the process described in section A of the Guidelines. The Office may 
also update the List on the basis of public information submissions, as 
detailed below.
    2. Any party may at any time file an information submission with 
the Office regarding the addition or removal of an entry from the List. 
Submitters should take note of the criteria and instructions in the 
``Information Requested on Child Labor and Forced Labor'' section of 
this notice, as well as the criteria listed in Section A of the 
Guidelines.
    3. The Office will review any submission of information to 
determine whether it provides relevant and probative information.
    4. The Office may consider a submission less reliable if it 
determines that: the submission does not clearly indicate the source(s) 
of the information presented; the submission does not identify the 
party filing the submission

[[Page 73378]]

or is not signed and dated; the submission does not provide relevant or 
probative information; or, the information is not within the scope of 
the TVPRA and/or does not address child labor or forced labor as 
defined herein. All submissions received will be made available to the 
public on the DOL Web site, consistent with applicable laws or 
regulations.
    5. In evaluating a submission, the Office will conduct further 
examination of available information relating to the good and country, 
as necessary, to assist the Office in making a determination concerning 
the addition or removal of the good from the List. The Office will 
undertake consultations with relevant U.S. government agencies and 
foreign governments, and may hold a public hearing for the purpose of 
receiving relevant information from interested persons.
    6. In order for an entry to be removed from the List, any person 
filing information regarding the entry must provide information that 
demonstrates that there is no significant incidence of child labor or 
forced labor in the production of the particular good in the country in 
question. In evaluating information on government, industry, or third-
party actions and initiatives to combat child labor or forced labor, 
the Office will consider particularly relevant and probative any 
available evidence of government, industry, and third-party actions 
that are effective in significantly reducing if not eliminating child 
labor and forced labor.
    7. Where the Office has made a determination concerning the 
addition, maintenance, or removal of the entry from the List, and where 
otherwise appropriate, the Office will publish an updated List in the 
Federal Register and on the DOL Web site.

C. Key Terms Used in the Guidelines

    ``Child Labor''--``Child labor'' under international standards 
means all work performed by a person below the age of 15. It also 
includes all work performed by a person below the age of 18 in the 
following practices: (A) All forms of slavery or practices similar to 
slavery, such as the sale or trafficking of children, debt bondage and 
serfdom, or forced or compulsory labor, including forced or compulsory 
recruitment of children for use in armed conflict; (B) the use, 
procuring, or offering of a child for prostitution, for the production 
of pornography or for pornographic purposes; (C) the use, procuring, or 
offering of a child for illicit activities in particular for the 
production and trafficking of drugs; and (D) work which, by its nature 
or the circumstances in which it is carried out, is likely to harm the 
health, safety, or morals of children. The work referred to in 
subparagraph (D) is determined by the laws, regulations, or competent 
authority of the country involved, after consultation with the 
organizations of employers and workers concerned, and taking into 
consideration relevant international standards. This definition will 
not apply to work specifically authorized by national laws, including 
work done by children in schools for general, vocational or technical 
education or in other training institutions, where such work is carried 
out in accordance with international standards under conditions 
prescribed by the competent authority, and does not prejudice 
children's attendance in school or their capacity to benefit from the 
instruction received.
    ``Countries''--``Countries'' means any foreign country or 
territory, including any overseas dependent territory or possession of 
a foreign country, or the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands.
    ``Forced Labor''--``Forced labor'' under international standards 
means all work or service which is exacted from any person under the 
menace of any penalty for its nonperformance and for which the worker 
does not offer himself voluntarily, and includes indentured labor. 
``Forced labor'' includes work provided or obtained by force, fraud, or 
coercion, including: (1) By threats of serious harm to, or physical 
restraint against any person; (2) by means of any scheme, plan, or 
pattern intended to cause the person to believe that, if the person did 
not perform such labor or services, that person or another person would 
suffer serious harm or physical restraint; or (3) by means of the abuse 
or threatened abuse of law or the legal process. For purposes of this 
definition, forced labor does not include work specifically authorized 
by national laws where such work is carried out in accordance with 
conditions prescribed by the competent authority, including: any work 
or service required by compulsory military service laws for work of a 
purely military character; work or service which forms part of the 
normal civic obligations of the citizens of a fully self-governing 
country; work or service exacted from any person as a consequence of a 
conviction in a court of law, provided that the said work or service is 
carried out under the supervision and control of a public authority and 
that the said person is not hired to or placed at the disposal of 
private individuals, companies or associations; work or service 
required in cases of emergency, such as in the event of war or of a 
calamity or threatened calamity, fire, flood, famine, earthquake, 
violent epidemic or epizootic diseases, invasion by animal, insect or 
vegetable pests, and in general any circumstance that would endanger 
the existence or the well-being of the whole or part of the population; 
and minor communal services of a kind which, being performed by the 
members of the community in the direct interest of the said community, 
can therefore be considered as normal civic obligations incumbent upon 
the members of the community, provided that the members of the 
community or their direct representatives have the right to be 
consulted in regard to the need for such services.
    ``Goods''--``Goods'' means goods, wares, articles, materials, 
items, supplies, and merchandise.
    ``Indentured Labor''--``Indentured labor'' means all labor 
undertaken pursuant to a contract entered into by an employee the 
enforcement of which can be accompanied by process or penalties.
    ``International Standards''--``International standards'' means 
generally accepted international standards relating to forced labor and 
child labor, such as international conventions and treaties. These 
Guidelines employ definitions of ``child labor'' and ``forced labor'' 
derived from international standards.
    ``Produced''--``Produced'' means mined, extracted, harvested, 
farmed, produced, created, and manufactured.

Information Requested on Child Labor and Forced Labor

    DOL requests current information about the nature and extent of 
child labor and forced labor in the production of goods 
internationally, as well as information on government, industry, or 
third-party actions and initiatives to address these problems. 
Information submitted may include studies, reports, statistics, news 
articles, electronic media, or other sources. Submitters should take 
into consideration the ``Sources of Information and Factors Considered 
in the Development and Maintenance of the List'' (Section A of the 
Procedural Guidelines), as well as the definitions of child labor and 
forced labor contained in section C of the Guidelines.
    Information tending to establish the presence or absence of a 
significant incidence of child labor or forced labor in the production 
of a particular good in a country will be considered the most relevant 
and probative. Governments that have ratified International Labor 
Organization (``ILO'') Convention 138 (Minimum Age), Convention 182 
(Worst Forms of Child Labor), Convention 29

[[Page 73379]]

(Forced Labor) and/or Convention 105 (Abolition of Forced Labor) may 
wish to submit relevant copies of their responses to any Observations 
or Direct Requests by the ILO's Committee of Experts on the Application 
of Conventions and Recommendations.
    Where applicable, information submissions should indicate their 
source or sources, and copies of the source material should be 
provided. If primary sources are utilized, such as research studies, 
interviews, direct observations, or other sources of quantitative or 
qualitative data, details on the research or data-gathering methodology 
should be provided.
    Information should be submitted to the addresses and within the 
time period set forth above. Submissions made via fax, mail, express 
delivery, hand delivery, or messenger service should clearly identify 
the person filing the submission and should be signed and dated. 
Submissions made via mail, express delivery, hand delivery, or 
messenger service should include an original and three copies of all 
materials and attachments. If possible, submitters should also provide 
copies of such materials and attachments on a computer disc. Note that 
security-related screening may result in significant delays in 
receiving comments and other written materials by regular mail.
    Classified information will not be accepted. The Office may request 
that classified information brought to its attention be declassified. 
Submissions containing confidential or personal information may be 
redacted by the Office before being made available to the public, in 
accordance with applicable laws and regulations. All submissions will 
be made available to the public on the DOL Web site, as appropriate. 
The Office will not respond directly to submissions or return any 
submissions to the submitter, but the Office may communicate with the 
submitter regarding any matters relating to the submission.

Announcement of Public Hearing

    DOL intends to hold a public hearing in 2008 to gather further 
information to assist in the development of the List. DOL expects to 
issue a Federal Register Notice announcing the hearing at least 30 days 
prior to the hearing date. The scope of the hearing will focus on the 
collection of information on child labor and forced labor in the 
production of goods internationally, and information on government, 
industry, or third-party actions and initiatives to combat child labor 
and forced labor. Information tending to demonstrate the presence or 
absence of a significant incidence of child labor or forced labor in 
the production of a particular good in a country will be considered the 
most relevant and probative.

    Signed at Washington, DC, this 20th day of December, 2007.
Charlotte M. Ponticelli,
Deputy Undersecretary for International Affairs.
 [FR Doc. E7-25036 Filed 12-26-07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510-28-P