For twenty years, Brian Iselin has heard the same question in boardrooms across the world:
"How much is this going to cost us?"
It's the wrong question.
The real question ? the one almost nobody asks ? is this:
What will this be worth?
In The Human Rights Dividend, Iselin makes a hard-headed commercial case for something most executives still treat as compliance overhead. Human rights, properly embedded into business strategy, are not a cost centre. They are a competitive advantage.
Drawing on decades of experience in intelligence, counter-slavery investigations, and corporate advisory work across multiple continents, Iselin shows how companies that invest seriously in human rights outperform their peers in three decisive areas:
- Talent ? attracting and retaining the best people
- Market Access ? securing contracts, capital, and supply chain resilience
- Resilience ? preventing the cascading crises that destroy value
As mandatory due diligence laws reshape global markets ? from the EU Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive to forced labour import bans ? the voluntary era is over. The companies that continue to treat human rights as a reporting exercise will pay for it. The ones that treat it as strategy will win.
Practical, unsentimental, and grounded in real cases and real numbers, this book introduces the ABCD Framework ? a clear, actionable system for embedding human rights into how you actually run your business.
This is not a moral appeal.
It is a business argument.
The dividend is there.
The question is whether you will collect it.