DAC BEACHCROFT LLP modern slavery statement summary (2022)
Organisation address
London,
England,
EC4N 8AF
We asked the organisation a series of questions about its modern slavery statement. Its answers are published on this page as a statement summary.
This statement provides information for all 6 recommended topics
What is a modern slavery statement?
PDF version of the statement (optional)
PDF statements were first introduced to the registry for the 2023 statement year.
About this statement summary
All answers relate to the financial year covered by the statement. The organisation is responsible for all the information it provided. Some of our questions are optional, so organisations may not have answered all of them. The statement summary does not replace the full modern slavery statement – below we provide a link to the full statement on the organisation’s website.
Contents
- Organisations covered by the statement
- Legal requirement to publish
- Statement period and sign-off details
- Recommended topics covered by the statement
- The organisation’s sectors and turnover
- Number of years producing statements
- Policies
- Training
- Monitoring working conditions
- Modern slavery risks
- Finding indicators of modern slavery
- Demonstrating progress
Organisations covered by the statement
DAC BEACHCROFT LLP modern slavery statement for 2022 is a group statement covering 3 organisations. See the full list of organisations covered by this statement
Legal requirement to publish
DAC BEACHCROFT LLP has confirmed it is required to publish a 2022 statement by law.
Statement period and sign-off details
The statement covers the following period:
30 September 2020 to 30 September 2021
The statement was signed off by:
Virginia Clegg (Senior Partner)
It was approved by the board (or equivalent management body) on:
30 September 2021
Recommended topics covered by the statement
Government guidance encourages organisations to cover a range of topics in their modern slavery statements, setting out the steps they’re taking to address modern slavery risks in their operations and supply chains. Read about the recommended topics in the statutory guidance.
We asked the organisation to tell us which topics its statement covers.
| Topics recommended by government guidance | Organisation’s response |
|---|---|
| The organisation’s structure, business and supply chains | Covered |
| Policies | Covered |
| Risk assessment | Covered |
| Due diligence (steps to address risk) | Covered |
| Training about modern slavery | Covered |
| Goals and key performance indicators (KPIs) to measure the effectiveness of the organisation's actions and progress over time | Covered |
The organisation’s sectors and turnover
Sectors
The organisation operates in the following sectors:
- Professional and administrative services and supplies, including legal, consulting and accounting services
Turnover
Its turnover in the financial accounting year of this statement was:
£100 million to £500 million
What does 'turnover' refer to in group statements?
Number of years producing statements
How does this work for group statements?
Policies (optional)
Training (optional)
What counts as training?
| We asked who the training was for | Organisation’s response |
|---|---|
| Your whole organisation | Yes |
| Your front line staff | No |
| Human resources | Yes |
| Executive-level staff | No |
| Procurement staff | Yes |
| Your suppliers | No |
| The wider community | No |
| Other |
Practice Governance & Risk Team, Real Estate and Employment Law Teams. We also publish business-wide comms to raise awareness of modern slavery risks.
|
Monitoring working conditions (optional)
Engaging with others
| We asked who the organisation engaged with | Organisation’s response |
|---|---|
| Your suppliers | Yes |
| Trade unions or worker representative groups | No |
| Civil society organisations | No |
| Professional auditors | No |
| Workers within your organisation | Yes |
| Workers within your supply chain | No |
| Central or local government | No |
| Law enforcement, such as police, GLAA and other local labour market inspectorates | No |
| Businesses in your industry or sector | No |
Social audits
What are social audits?
Grievance mechanisms
| We asked if workers could raise concerns this way | Organisation’s response |
|---|---|
| Using anonymous whistleblowing services, such as a helpline or mobile phone app | Yes |
| Through trade unions or other worker representative groups | No |
Other ways of monitoring working conditions
Modern slavery risks (optional)
Priority risks for this organisation (1 of 3)
| Questions we asked about this risk | Organisation’s response |
|---|---|
| Where it was most likely to occur |
Organisation’s response:
Within your supply chains.
|
| Who was it most likely to affect |
Organisation’s response:
|
| In which country | Organisation’s response: No details provided |
| Actions or plans to address this risk | Organisation’s response: Obtaining contractual warranties and ensuring indemnity provisions and rights to terminate for breach of our Anti-Slavery policy are factored into our contracts Ensuring risk areas are documented, monitored and taken into consideration in any future contract renewals Obtaining a contractual right to request compliance-related information from suppliers Introduce annual audit of business Critical (i.e. Tier 1) suppliers to verify their due diligence and compliance |
Priority risks for this organisation (2 of 3)
| Questions we asked about this risk | Organisation’s response |
|---|---|
| Where it was most likely to occur |
Organisation’s response:
Within your supply chains.
|
| Who was it most likely to affect |
Organisation’s response:
|
| In which country | Organisation’s response: No details provided |
| Actions or plans to address this risk | Organisation’s response: Obtaining contractual warranties that no slavery is used anywhere in the supplier's business or by any of the suppliers in its supply chain. Ensuring all necessary processes/policies have been put into place by suppliers. Adding indemnity provisions and rights to terminate for breach of our Anti-Slavery policy into our contracts. Obtaining a contractual right to request compliance-related information from suppliers as well as a contractual right to audit suppliers at our discretion. |
Priority risks for this organisation (3 of 3)
| Questions we asked about this risk | Organisation’s response |
|---|---|
| Where it was most likely to occur |
Organisation’s response:
Within your supply chains.
|
| Who was it most likely to affect |
Organisation’s response:
|
| In which country | Organisation’s response: No details provided |
| Actions or plans to address this risk | Organisation’s response: Ensuring risk areas are documented, monitored and taken into consideration in any future contract renewals. Obtaining a contractual right to request compliance-related information from suppliers. Our internal supplier audit programme is being developed and will include an assessment of compliance with our Supplier Operating Principles. Extending risk mapping to include location, the length of the relationship and any other existing information to enable us to rate suppliers. |