This disclosure asks an organisation to report whether it has identified any incidents where the rights of Indigenous peoples were violated, and to describe those incidents in a way that is clear and specific. The focus is on actual violations, not general commitments, policies, or future intentions. If there were no such incidents in the reporting period, that should be stated plainly.
In practice, the main question is how broadly the organisation has looked across its activities and relationships, rather than only at flagship sites or headline projects. The reporting should cover the parts of the business where Indigenous peoples could be affected, including operations and relevant business relationships, so the organisation can show whether any violations were found and where they occurred.
This LRA educational guidance supports disclosure preparation. For the exact requirements, always refer to the official GRI source.
A quick mental checklist before you prepare this disclosure — tick each as you settle it.
Key datapoints to prepare
How to prepare it
Request incident log and case status from Legal / Company Secretariat
Translate the disclosure into an internal business question — then adapt it to your organisation's own language.
Use your organisation’s own case, grievance, incident, complaints, land-access, or stakeholder-engagement terms first, then map them to this disclosure. Keep the request in the language the owner already uses internally, and check the source material before sign-off.
Please provide the GRI 411-1 data for the evidence needed for GRI 411:GRI 411-1, including the total number and the status of the incidents and actions taken.
Why it fails: This uses framework language that the owner may not recognise, and it does not tell them which internal log to use, how to count cases, what period to cover, or what fields to return. It is too abstract to produce a clean extract.
Please pull the [reporting period] extract from your [case log / matter tracker / incident register] for any community rights, land access, consultation, or related matters involving indigenous peoples. For each case, include the reference, date, location, internal category, current status, and action taken, plus a short note on how you counted the cases and any exclusions. Use your team’s own terms, and confirm the source system and approver.
Notes that turn data into a disclosure
LRA training templates — adapt them to your organisation, and check the official source before sign-off.
Explain how you defined a reportable case, what sources you used to identify it, and how you decided whether it belonged in the period covered.
Set out what the figures mean in practice by linking the number of cases and their current status to the organisation’s exposure, response effort, and any remaining issues.
If the numbers changed materially, note whether that was driven by more cases being found, different reporting coverage, or faster closure and follow-up of cases already identified.
Preparation tools & forms
Professional preparation tools for GRI 411-1 — free with an LRA Community membership. Register once (it's free) and every download unlocks, together with the Disclosure Library, templates and the LRA AI-assistant.
For each claim, check the evidence
Evidence pack to prepare
Common reporting gaps
Mistakes to avoid when collecting the data
Where judgement is often needed
Illustrative examples
Synthetic, written by LRA — not from a company report, not text from any standard.
*Synthetic example for illustration only.* During the year, we recorded **3** matters where our activities were found to have affected Indigenous rights. - **2** were closed out by year-end after remediation, revised site controls, and follow-up with the affected communities. - **1** remained open at period end; we had agreed an action plan, started implementation, and were monitoring completion dates.
This example shows how to report the count of identified matters and then explain where each one stood at the reporting date, together with the main response taken.
*Synthetic example for illustration only.* We identified **2** cases during the reporting period in which our operations were linked to concerns about Indigenous rights. - **1** case was resolved after compensation, updated engagement, and changes to work practices. - **1** case was still being addressed at the end of the period, with agreed corrective steps underway and progress tracked through our community liaison process.
This example demonstrates a simple narrative disclosure that gives the total number of identified cases and then describes the status of each case and the actions taken.
How companies report GRI 411-1
Real reports where this topic is disclosed. These are report practice, not exact disclosure templates to copy.

Scenarios to work through
During the year, a project team logged two separate complaints from an indigenous community about access to a traditional area near a worksite. One complaint was resolved through agreed site changes; the other was still being reviewed at year-end.
A contractor’s security staff blocked community members from entering a customary gathering area, but the issue was corrected the same day and the contractor apologised. Management is unsure whether a short-lived event still belongs in the year-end disclosure.
The legal team has one substantiated case from a prior year that is still under remedy, and one new complaint raised this year that was found to be unrelated to indigenous rights. The reporting team is unsure whether both should appear in the current-year disclosure.
At year-end, there were three identified incidents involving indigenous rights: one was closed with compensation paid, one was still being negotiated, and one had been referred to an external body for review. The draft report currently lists only the number.
Related framework references
How this disclosure maps across the major reporting frameworks.
Questions this page answers
The page says to prepare two datapoints: incident count, and incident status and response. Use those as the core inputs before you start drafting.
Use the page’s step-by-step preparation section to define what incidents you are counting and how you will describe their status and response. Keep the scope aligned to the evidence you can actually support.
The page is designed for sustainability/ESG managers, HR or data owners, and assurance reviewers, so ownership should sit with the person or team that can collect the incident data and evidence pack. The page does not assign a mandatory owner, so you need to set that internally.
The page includes an evidence pack with five items for assurance readiness, plus four assurance claims to verify. Use those to assemble support for the incident count, incident status, and response before sign-off.
The page says there are four claims to verify, each with a claim, risk and evidence prompt. Use them as a checklist to test whether your draft is supported and where the evidence gaps are.
The page lists common reporting gaps and mistakes, so it is meant to help you spot missing incident data, weak status/response detail, or unsupported drafting. Use that section as a pre-submission quality check.
The page includes a draft-output section with visualisation ideas, narrative starters and a GRI content-index line. Use the incident count and incident status/response to populate those draft elements.
Yes, as a worked illustration only. The page says the example is synthetic and includes a quantitative table, so you can use it to see how the data may be presented, but not as a substitute for your own figures.
The Download Centre includes a Prep & Assurance workbook in .xlsx format. It is there to help you prepare the disclosure and organise the assurance-ready evidence.
The Download Centre also provides a printable Library Card in PDF format. Use it as a quick reference alongside the workbook when you are preparing the disclosure and checking evidence.
The page has a 'From company reports' table that links to real published reports at the pages where the topic is disclosed. Use it to see how others have presented the topic in practice.
Get your GRI 411-1 tools — free
Your preparation tools are free for LRA Community members and students. Register once (it's free) and your download starts right away — plus the Disclosure Library, templates and the LRA AI-assistant.
You're in — your download is starting
Your file is downloading now. Your Community Cabinet — with the Disclosure Library, templates and the LRA AI-assistant — is ready too.
Open your Cabinet →