This disclosure asks an organisation to explain how it is covering the topic of just transition across its business, rather than only describing a few headline initiatives. In practice, the report should show where the organisation has looked, what parts of the business are included, and whether the approach is broad enough to reflect the organisation’s real footprint and workforce impacts.
The practical focus is on coverage and completeness: readers should be able to see whether the organisation’s reporting applies across operations, sites, functions or value-chain activities, or whether it is limited to selected locations or flagship projects. The aim is to make clear how far the organisation’s just transition approach reaches in day-to-day operations and where any gaps or exclusions remain.
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 the workforce movement and training data from People Analytics
Translate the disclosure into an internal business question — then adapt it to your organisation's own language.
Use your organisation’s own people-data terms first, then map them to the reporting line items. For example, if you say joiners/leavers, redeployments, contractors, or learning completions internally, keep that language in the request and translate it only when preparing the disclosure pack. Check the official source before sign-off.
Please provide the data for the just transition disclosure, including all workforce metrics and contextual information.
Why it fails: It uses framework language instead of the organisation’s own people-data terms, so the owner has to guess which internal reports to pull. It also does not say which systems, population, counting basis, or internal categories to use, which makes the response harder to reconcile and review.
Please send the joiner, leaver, redeployment, learning, and non-employee worker figures for [reporting period] for [entity/boundary], using your normal HRIS/payroll/learning definitions. Include the gender split, internal worker categories, counting basis, location list, and any notes on restructures, site changes, or data gaps so I can map the figures into the reporting pack.
Notes that turn data into a disclosure
LRA training templates — adapt them to your organisation, and check the official source before sign-off.
Define the reporting basis clearly, including who is counted as a worker, how gender and worker category are classified, and whether the figures cover the full year or another reporting period.
Explain what the figures say about workforce movement, internal redeployment, and skills development, and note whether the non-employee workforce is material to how the organisation operates.
If hiring, exits, redeployment, or training numbers change noticeably, link the movement to known business events such as restructuring, growth, seasonal demand, or a change in training activity.
Preparation tools & forms
Professional preparation tools for GRI 102-3 — 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.
: we show movements in our workforce during the year, split by gender and worker category, together with the number of people we brought in, lost, moved into other roles, and supported with up- and re-skilling. We also include the count of non-employee workers we engaged and the number whose assignment ended.
Use this as a pattern for a quantitative narrative: keep the wording plain, make the breakdowns add up, and ensure every figure in the table is internally consistent.
: we present our year-end people movements in a simple stacked format, showing recruitment, exits, internal moves, and training activity by gender and worker type. We also report the number of external workers we used and how many of those assignments finished.
This example shows how to cover the same disclosure points with a different sector and a different set of figures while keeping the presentation concise and additive.
How companies report GRI 102-3 in practice
Real reports where this topic is disclosed. These are report practice, not exact disclosure templates to copy.

Scenarios to work through
A site is closing one production line and moving part of the work to a nearby facility. HR has a draft table showing 18 new hires, 11 departures, 7 redeployments and 24 people trained for new roles, but the figures are still split across payroll, agency records and the learning system.
A restructuring has moved 9 employees into different roles, but 4 of them were also given upskilling courses before the move. The draft report currently lists all 13 people under redeployment and all 13 again under training.
A contractor team was brought in for a six-month shutdown, and 22 of those workers finished early when the shutdown ended. The operations team wants to include them in the workforce movement table because they were on site and their departure was linked to the project.
A plant in a coastal area has started a transition programme after a major process change. The draft report says the site has local community impacts, but it does not explain which locations are affected or whether any formal community engagement took place there.
Related framework references
How this disclosure maps across the major reporting frameworks.
Questions this page answers
The page lists the core datapoints to prepare, including joiners, leavers, redeployments, training recipients, non-employee worker movements, living-wage coverage, affected sites, sites with agreements, and the reporting method note. It also flags the basis and timing choices you need to settle up front, such as headcount or FTE and the reporting period basis.
Use it as a working sequence to move from scoping the disclosure to collecting the right figures, checking the method note, and pulling together the evidence pack. It is designed to help you turn source data into a draft rather than leaving the disclosure as a blank template.
The page says you need to settle the reporting method note, whether the figures are on a headcount or FTE basis, and the period timing basis. Those choices affect how the numbers are compiled and explained in the draft.
The page is set up for practitioner use, so ownership should sit with the person coordinating the disclosure while data owners provide the underlying figures and evidence. The workbook and evidence pack are there to help you assign and track those inputs clearly.
The page includes an evidence pack with five items to support assurance readiness, alongside six assurance claims to verify. In practice, that means keeping the source records, method note and other supporting files together so a reviewer can trace the numbers back to evidence.
The page has a list of common reporting gaps and mistakes to help you spot issues before sign-off. It is intended to catch problems such as missing datapoints, unclear method notes or weak evidence before the disclosure is drafted.
The workbook is the main download for organising the disclosure, collecting the required datapoints and checking assurance readiness. It is paired with a printable Library Card PDF, so you can work through the preparation steps and keep a reference copy to hand.
Yes, but only as an illustrative guide. The example is synthetic and the quantitative table is internally consistent, so it is useful for seeing how the disclosure can be presented without treating it as a real company benchmark.
The page suggests draft-output elements such as visualisation ideas, narrative starters and a GRI content-index line. That helps you move from raw data to a readable disclosure with a clear signpost to the relevant content.
No. The page says there is no one-to-one ESRS or IFRS equivalent asserted, so it should be used as practitioner guidance for this disclosure rather than as a cross-framework mapping tool.
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