Table of Contents
L’Oréal S.A. is a French multinational cosmetics conglomerate with no identified involvement in Israeli military, defence, or weapons supply chains. Its BDS-1000 score of 233 (Tier D) is driven almost entirely by a single structural fact: the company owns and actively manages a wholly-owned commercial subsidiary, L’Oréal Israel Ltd., through which it participates in the Israeli consumer and beauty-tech ecosystem. Secondary contributions come from a documented political double standard — named conflict statements for Ukraine and the Black Lives Matter movement against silence on Gaza — and from a modest, unresolved technology-scouting footprint in Tel Aviv.
The forensic record across all four domains is substantially one of absence: no defence contracts, no military-grade or dual-use products, no supply relationship with Israeli defence primes, no Israeli sovereign cloud participation, no identified lobbying for Israel, and no donations to pro-Israel advocacy organisations. The company does not appear in SIPRI arms databases, IMOD/SIBAT procurement registers, or Israeli defence prime annual reports. The BDS and Palestine Solidarity campaigns that target L’Oréal explicitly ground their call in L’Oréal’s general commercial presence in Israel — not in military or strategic technology relationships.
The score’s stability is moderate-to-high: most unresolved evidence gaps (cybersecurity vendor identity, BOLD hub post-2023 status, Dead Sea sourcing geography) would, if resolved adversely, shift the composite score modestly rather than dramatically. A material uplift would require confirmation of either a scaled Israeli R&D engineering centre or active political advocacy — neither of which is supported by current evidence.
| Date | Event |
|---|---|
| 1909 | L’Oréal founded in France by Eugène Schueller; no Israeli founding connection 1 |
| 2018 (March) | L’Oréal acquires ModiFace, a Canadian-origin AR beauty try-on company; no Israeli-origin acquisition 2 |
| 2018–2019 | L’Oréal establishes BOLD technology-scouting hub in Tel Aviv; scale described as scout-level, not a full R&D centre 3 |
| 2020 | L’Oréal designates Microsoft Azure as preferred cloud partner; Google Cloud strategic partnership announced 2021 45 |
| 2020 (June) | L’Oréal issues named racial equity commitment letter following Black Lives Matter movement 6 |
| 2021 | L’Oréal cited as active in OurCrowd (Israeli venture platform) ecosystem; precise relationship unresolved 7 |
| 2022 (March) | L’Oréal issues named statement suspending Russian operations following Ukraine invasion 8 |
| 2022 | L’Oréal–Salesforce CRM partnership announced 9 |
| 2022–2023 | L’Oréal cited by Start-Up Nation Central as active in Israeli startup ecosystem; SkinGPT AI engagement documented 1011 |
| 2023 (October) | Hamas attacks and Israeli military campaign in Gaza begin; L’Oréal issues no named public statement on the conflict 12 |
| 2023 (November) | HuffPost France reports internal employee concerns about L’Oréal’s silence on Gaza; Al Jazeera documents consumer boycott pressure on cosmetics multinationals including L’Oréal 1314 |
| 2023 | L’Oréal Israel Ltd. subsidiary confirmed operational in Tel Aviv with approximately 50–200 employees 15 |
| 2024–2025 | No named L’Oréal public statement on Gaza conflict identified through April 2025 12 |
L’Oréal S.A. is the world’s largest cosmetics company by revenue, founded in France in 1909 and listed on Euronext Paris as a component of the CAC 40 index.1 Its corporate purpose — defined in its Articles of Association — is the manufacture, sale, and distribution of cosmetics, beauty, and personal care products, with no dual-purpose or state-advancement mandate.16
The company operates four consumer divisions (Professional Products, Consumer Products, L’Oréal Luxe, Active Cosmetics) and reports revenue across four geographic zones: North America, Europe, North Asia, and SAPMENA (South Asia Pacific, Middle East, North Africa).17 Israel is not broken out as a standalone revenue line; it is subsumed within either the Europe or SAPMENA zone, which is not publicly specified in mandatory filings.
Ownership is concentrated. The Bettencourt Meyers family holds approximately 33% via Téthys SAS, a French family holding company; institutional investors and public float account for the remainder.18 Nestlé S.A. fully exited its ~29% stake in September 2014 and has no residual position.19 The French state holds no golden share, special veto right, or directorship appointment right. No Israeli state ownership, sovereign wealth fund stakes, or Israeli institutional investor majority positions have been identified.
L’Oréal’s enterprise technology infrastructure is anchored by Western hyperscalers — Google Cloud (AI workloads and personalisation) and Microsoft Azure (data lake and enterprise compute) — and enterprise software platforms including SAP (ERP) and Salesforce (CRM).4520 Its most significant beauty-technology acquisition, ModiFace (2018), is a Canadian-origin augmented reality company whose patents are assigned to Canadian and French entities.2
The V-MIL audit examined six sub-categories of potential military involvement: direct defence contracting; dual-use products and tactical variants; heavy machinery and construction; supply chain integration with defence primes; logistical sustainment and base services; and munitions, weapons systems, and strategic platforms. The conclusion across all six is a comprehensive nil finding, supported by affirmative negative evidence rather than mere absence of search results.
L’Oréal’s revenue is reported entirely across four consumer divisions — Professional Products, Consumer Products, L’Oréal Luxe, and Active Cosmetics — with no defence sector revenue line, government security customer category, or military end-user disclosure in any Universal Registration Document reviewed.17 This is not an omission gap; French mandatory disclosure requirements under the AMF framework would require material defence contracts to be disclosed, and none appear.
No contract, tender award, framework agreement, or memorandum of understanding between L’Oréal or any named subsidiary and the Israeli Ministry of Defence, the IDF, the Israel Prison Service, the Israel Border Police, or any other Israeli state security body has been identified in any public record.17 L’Oréal does not appear in SIBAT (Israel Defence Export and Defence Cooperation Directorate) public directories, Israeli defence export catalogues, or SIPRI’s arms industry and arms transfers databases, which systematically track companies with significant defence production or supply roles.2122
The product portfolio is categorically inapplicable to military procurement. L’Oréal’s manufacturing outputs — surfactants, emulsions, INCI-listed cosmetic-grade actives, pigments, polymer-based formulations, and fragrance compounds — do not correspond to any category listed under the EU Dual-Use Regulation (2021/821), the US Export Administration Regulations (EAR/ECCN schedules), or the Wassenaar Arrangement’s Dual-Use Goods and Technologies annex. Because no dual-use product lines have been identified, no civilian-to-military diversion pathway arises from L’Oréal’s documented product range.
Supply chain integration with Israeli defence primes was specifically examined against Elbit Systems, Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI), and Rafael Advanced Defense Systems — the three largest Israeli defence primes. Annual reports and public supplier disclosures from all three list no cosmetics or personal care manufacturer as a component, materials, or services supplier.232425 Jane’s Defence Industry supplier index entries, to the extent accessible in training data, do not reference L’Oréal in any supplier or subcontractor capacity.
No service contracts to Israeli military installations, IDF training facilities, forward operating bases, or border infrastructure have been identified. L’Oréal uses third-party logistics providers for standard commercial distribution in the Israeli market, consistent with routine civilian FMCG operations. There is a theoretical pathway by which L’Oréal consumer products could reach IDF personnel through commercial retail channels or welfare procurement tenders without any direct corporate contract; however, no public evidence of even this indirect pathway at contract level was identified.
Regarding export licensing: no government in France, the United Kingdom, the European Union, or the United States has granted, denied, suspended, or revoked a strategic export licence for L’Oréal products in connection with Israeli military, security, or defence end-users. L’Oréal’s consumer product categories are not subject to strategic export control licensing under normal commercial circumstances. No court proceedings, judicial reviews, or public interest litigation targeting L’Oréal in a military or security supply context have been identified.26
The BDS Movement’s consumer boycott call against L’Oréal and the Palestine Solidarity Campaign UK’s listing are explicitly grounded in L’Oréal’s general commercial presence in Israel — not in any documented military, defence, or weapons supply relationship.2728 The Who Profits Research Center, the AFSC Investigate database, the UN OHCHR Business Database, Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, Forensic Architecture, the Corporate Occupation project, and the ECCHR have not published investigations specifically naming L’Oréal in a military or security supply capacity based on training data through April 2026.293031
The I-MIL, M, and P scores are each 0.00, producing a V-MIL domain score of 0.00.
The most significant residual uncertainty in this domain concerns the partial non-public nature of SIBAT directories. Full exclusion from all SIBAT subcategories cannot be confirmed from open sources alone. However, even if L’Oréal appeared in a non-public SIBAT subsidiary register, it would need to be associated with a documented product or service relevant to Israeli defence — and L’Oréal’s product portfolio provides no basis for such a connection.
A second residual gap concerns cosmetic-grade chemical raw materials procured from or supplied to Israeli entities. Whether any such materials are dual-listed under Israeli or EU export control schedules has not been publicly documented. This theoretical gap does not produce a non-zero V-MIL score under any rubric band, because the relevant materials (cosmetic-grade actives, surfactants, emulsions) are categorically distinct from controlled precursor chemicals, and no dual-listing evidence has been identified.
The most adverse hypothetical — that L’Oréal consumer products reach IDF personnel through commercial retail channels — constitutes retail-channel resale by an unrelated intermediary, not a direct or structured military supply relationship. This would not generate a V-MIL score under the rubric’s minimum threshold for scoring. A score change in V-MIL would require evidence of a direct contractual or production relationship with an Israeli defence entity, and no available evidence supports that scenario.
| Entity | Type | Relevance | Finding |
|---|---|---|---|
| L’Oréal Israel Ltd. | Subsidiary | Consumer market operations | No defence contracts identified 15 |
| IMOD / IDF | Israeli state security | Potential contracting counterparty | No contract identified 17 |
| Elbit Systems | Israeli defence prime | Potential supply chain link | No L’Oréal reference in filings 23 |
| Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI) | Israeli defence prime | Potential supply chain link | No L’Oréal reference in filings 24 |
| Rafael Advanced Defense Systems | Israeli defence prime | Potential supply chain link | No L’Oréal reference in filings 25 |
| SIPRI | Arms transfer database | Definitive exclusion check | No L’Oréal entry 21 |
| SIBAT | Israeli defence export directorate | Partial exclusion check | Partially non-public; no public entry 32 |
| Who Profits Research Center | NGO database | Military sector category check | No military supply profile identified 29 |
| AFSC Investigate | NGO database | Security supply category check | No confirmed military inclusion 33 |
| UN OHCHR Business Database | International body | Settlement activity database | No confirmed L’Oréal inclusion 30 |
| Forensic Architecture | NGO investigator | Weapons/infrastructure investigations | No L’Oréal investigation identified 34 |
| BDS Movement | Civil society | Boycott campaign | Grounds are commercial presence, not military supply 27 |
| Palestine Solidarity Campaign (UK) | Civil society | Boycott campaign | Grounds are commercial presence, not military supply 28 |
| EU Dual-Use Regulation 2021/821 | Regulatory | Dual-use product classification | L’Oréal products not listed 17 |
The V-DIG audit examined L’Oréal’s enterprise technology stack, surveillance and biometric deployments, cloud infrastructure, defence and intelligence technology relationships, AI and autonomous systems, and its R&D and innovation footprint in Israel. The domain score of 0.07 reflects a finding of incidental passive commercial consumption of standard Western technology platforms, with no confirmed Israeli-origin vendor relationship across any sub-category.
L’Oréal’s enterprise architecture is anchored by Western hyperscalers and enterprise software providers: Google Cloud (AI workloads, personalisation, consumer analytics), Microsoft Azure (data lake, enterprise compute), SAP (ERP), and Salesforce (CRM).45920 None of these are Israeli-domiciled entities. Google Cloud and Microsoft Azure maintain significant engineering operations in Israel as a structural characteristic of their own platforms; this cannot be attributed as a direct L’Oréal procurement decision toward Israeli technology entities, and the rubric’s Customer Cap rule appropriately limits the scoring weight.
No public evidence has been identified of a direct, named licensing or subscription contract between L’Oréal and any Israeli-origin cybersecurity vendor — including Check Point Software, Wiz, SentinelOne, CyberArk, Verint, Claroty, or NICE Ltd. Source classes reviewed include L’Oréal’s 2022 and 2023 Universal Registration Documents, vendor investor relations documents, SEC and AMF filings, and technology trade press.1735 L’Oréal’s 2023 URD identifies cybersecurity as a principal enterprise risk but does not name specific vendors. This constitutes the domain’s most material evidence gap: because annual reports do not disclose cybersecurity vendor names and no procurement record is publicly available, the presence of Israeli-origin tooling (e.g., SentinelOne, CyberArk, Wiz) within L’Oréal’s enterprise stack cannot be confirmed or ruled out from public sources alone.
The ModiFace acquisition, which might superficially appear relevant to surveillance or biometric technology, does not generate a V-DIG score. ModiFace is a Canadian-origin company (founded in Toronto) whose technology is deployed exclusively for consumer-facing virtual cosmetic simulation — lipstick and foundation try-on via smartphone camera — not for identity verification, loss prevention, or surveillance applications.236 ModiFace and L’Oréal patents are assigned to Canadian and French entities per the European Patent Office database. No Israeli facial recognition or biometric identification vendor (AnyVision/Oosto, BriefCam, Trigo) has been identified in any L’Oréal deployment. No Israeli retail analytics platform (specifically Trax, which is Israeli-founded) has been confirmed in a direct named L’Oréal contract.
L’Oréal’s Israeli R&D and innovation presence is limited to a startup-scouting function. Israeli business press reported in 2019 that L’Oréal established a technology-scouting hub in Tel Aviv focused on identifying Israeli beauty-tech and consumer-tech startups for potential partnership or investment.3 This was described as a scout-level office function, not a full engineering or product development centre. No post-2020 corporate disclosure has confirmed, expanded, or contradicted this report; whether the hub remains operational following the October 2023 conflict escalation is unknown. L’Oréal has not publicly disclosed a large-scale R&D engineering centre in Israel comparable to those maintained by Intel, Microsoft, or Google in their Israeli operations.
No public evidence identifies L’Oréal acquiring an Israeli-origin technology company. The BOLD startup investment vehicle has not publicly disclosed investments in Israeli technology startups in any corporate filing or press release reviewed.37 No patent co-development arrangements or formal research collaboration agreements between L’Oréal and Israeli academic institutions (Technion, Hebrew University/Yissum, Weizmann Institute) have been identified.3839 Patent searches on the European Patent Office database show no systematic pattern of jointly assigned patents with Israeli institutions or Israeli co-inventors.
L’Oréal is categorically not a cloud infrastructure provider and is not a party to Project Nimbus (the Israeli government cloud contract awarded to Google and AWS in 2021) or any comparable Israeli sovereign cloud programme. L’Oréal does not provide data sovereignty services, infrastructure resilience platforms, or digital services to Israeli state institutions. No contract, partnership, or service agreement between L’Oréal and the Israeli Ministry of Defence, IDF, or Israeli intelligence agencies has been identified. L’Oréal’s commercially available technology — including ModiFace facial mapping and AI skin diagnostics — has not been reported as deployed or repurposed for military, intelligence, or law enforcement surveillance applications in Israel or the occupied territories.
The I-DIG, M, and P scores are each 1.50, producing a V-DIG domain score of 0.07. The scoring reflects passive commercial consumption of standard Western software platforms, with the Customer Cap and Directionality Rule applied. Any confirmed Israeli-origin cybersecurity vendor would move I-DIG to Band 3.1–3.9 under the rubric, resulting in a modest composite score increase but not a change in tier given the blending methodology.
The central challenge to the 1.50 scoring is the undisclosed cybersecurity vendor stack. Enterprise cybersecurity deployments at a company of L’Oréal’s scale routinely include multiple specialised vendors; Israeli-origin products (CyberArk for privileged access management, SentinelOne or Check Point for endpoint detection, Wiz for cloud security posture) are prevalent in the FMCG enterprise segment. The absence of a named confirmed relationship is an absence of public evidence, not confirmed absence of the relationship. If a named Israeli-origin cybersecurity vendor were confirmed, I-DIG would rise from 1.50 to approximately 3.50, increasing V-DIG from 0.07 to approximately 0.64 — a modest absolute change that would not affect the Tier D classification or the composite score materially.
The Tel Aviv scouting hub represents a second unresolved gap. The 2019 Globes report has not been confirmed, updated, or contradicted in any post-2020 L’Oréal corporate disclosure. If the hub were confirmed as ongoing and involving direct equity investment in Israeli startups rather than passive scouting, that evidence would be more appropriately scored under V-ECON (innovation-sector FDI) than V-DIG. The 2019 description does not support the Band 6+ threshold reserved for provision of technology to Israeli state or military entities.
A third limitation is the third-party mediated surveillance pathway: L’Oréal operates across thousands of third-party retail touchpoints; whether third-party retailers deploying Israeli-origin shelf analytics or in-store video analytics do so within L’Oréal-branded retail environments is not determinable from public sources. This potential pathway would, if confirmed, represent incidental commercial exposure rather than a direct L’Oréal procurement decision, and would not generate a score above Band 2.0 under the rubric.
| Entity | Type | Relevance | Finding |
|---|---|---|---|
| Google Cloud | US hyperscaler | Primary cloud partner | Named partnership; Israeli engineering ops are Google’s, not L’Oréal’s 4 |
| Microsoft Azure | US hyperscaler | Preferred cloud partner | Named partnership; no Israeli-specific dimension identified 5 |
| Alibaba Cloud | Chinese hyperscaler | China market data residency | Named partnership for China operations 40 |
| SAP | German enterprise software | ERP backbone | Named partnership; no Israeli-specific dimension 20 |
| Salesforce | US CRM platform | Consumer engagement | Named partnership; no Israeli-specific dimension 9 |
| ModiFace | Canadian AR company | Beauty try-on technology | Canadian-origin; not surveillance; patents French/Canadian 236 |
| Check Point Software | Israeli cybersecurity | Potential stack vendor | No named L’Oréal contract identified 17 |
| CyberArk | Israeli cybersecurity | Potential stack vendor | No named L’Oréal contract identified 35 |
| Wiz | Israeli cybersecurity | Potential stack vendor | No named L’Oréal contract identified 41 |
| SentinelOne | Israeli-origin cybersecurity | Potential stack vendor | No named L’Oréal contract identified 17 |
| AnyVision / Oosto | Israeli facial recognition | Potential retail deployment | No deployment identified 42 |
| BriefCam | Israeli video analytics | Potential retail deployment | No deployment identified 43 |
| Trax | Israeli-founded shelf analytics | Potential retail integration | No named contract identified 44 |
| BOLD Tel Aviv Hub | L’Oréal innovation function | Startup scouting | Scout-level, 2019; post-2022 status unresolved 3 |
| Technion / Yissum / Weizmann | Israeli academic institutions | Potential R&D collaboration | No patent co-development or formal agreement identified 3839 |
| Publicis Sapient | IT integrator | Digital transformation services | Named integrator; no Israeli-origin sub-vendor confirmed 45 |
| European Patent Office | Patent registry | Patent assignee check | L’Oréal/ModiFace patents assigned to Canadian/French entities 46 |
| Project Nimbus | Israeli sovereign cloud contract | Sovereign cloud participation | Not applicable; L’Oréal is not a cloud provider 17 |
| Who Profits Research Center | NGO database | Commercial operations entry | Entry focuses on commercial ops; no tech provider finding 29 |
The V-ECON domain is the primary driver of L’Oréal’s BDS-1000 score. The domain score of 3.54 — the highest of the four domains — reflects a documented, structured commercial and investment presence in the Israeli economy through a wholly-owned subsidiary and a documented (if partly unresolved) innovation-sector engagement, anchored by direct 100% ownership that places Proximity at 8.00.
Subsidiary structure and physical footprint. L’Oréal Israel Ltd. is a wholly-owned subsidiary of L’Oréal S.A., registered in Israel, operating from a Tel Aviv office (Yigal Alon Street area) and managing luxury, professional products, and active cosmetics divisions for the Israeli market.15 LinkedIn workforce data indicates approximately 50–200 employees associated with the Israeli entity, performing brand management, sales, and marketing functions — consistent with a mid-sized commercial subsidiary rather than a manufacturing or R&D operation.47 The consumer products division has historically been managed via the Diplomat Distributors relationship for retail logistics, although the current status of that arrangement post-2023 has not been publicly confirmed.48
Innovation-sector engagement. L’Oréal established a BOLD technology-scouting and venture hub in Tel Aviv as part of its global open-innovation programme, documented in 2018–2019 sources.349 This hub was documented engaging with Israeli beauty-tech and AI startups; in 2022–2023, L’Oréal was cited by Start-Up Nation Central as active in the Israeli startup ecosystem, and a NoCamels report documented L’Oréal’s involvement with SkinGPT, an Israeli AI-based skin diagnostic technology.1011 L’Oréal was additionally cited in 2021 in connection with the OurCrowd Israeli venture crowdfunding platform, though the precise nature of that relationship — co-investment, LP position, or platform membership — is not specified in available public records.7
Analytical chain: Impact band. The scoring rubric places L’Oréal in the Operational Presence band (I-ECON 5.1–6.0) at 5.50. This reflects a physical footprint performing support functions (brand management, sales, marketing) through a registered subsidiary, combined with documented ecosystem engagement in the Israeli innovation sector. The impact does not reach the Core R&D band (7.0–7.4) because: (a) no manufacturing, data centre, or logistics infrastructure has been identified in Israel; (b) the BOLD hub was described at scout scale in available sources, not as a full engineering operation; and (c) Israel is not characterised as a strategic growth market or regional hub in any L’Oréal investor communication.17
Analytical chain: Magnitude. Magnitude is scored at 4.50 (Low/Mid: Modest Presence). This reflects the small subsidiary headcount, the absence of manufacturing or infrastructure, Israel’s non-disclosure as a standalone revenue market, and the fact that no reliable estimate of L’Oréal’s Israeli-market revenue places it in a range that would constitute a material proportion of L’Oréal’s global turnover.1748 The BOLD hub and OurCrowd engagement represent a modest but documented economic contribution to the Israeli innovation sector, the scope of which remains unresolved post-October 2023.
Analytical chain: Proximity. Proximity is scored at 8.00 (Strategic Partner/Active Parent: direct commercial contract and direct ownership). L’Oréal S.A. is the direct 100% owner of L’Oréal Israel Ltd., actively managing it under L’Oréal’s global brand and operating framework.1517 This is the highest confidence finding in the V-ECON domain.
Profit flow direction and ownership structure. A significant contextual factor is the direction of capital flows. L’Oréal is not Israeli-owned; profits generated by L’Oréal Israel Ltd. are repatriated outward from Israel to the French parent entity, consistent with standard subsidiary transfer pricing and dividend distribution rules.1819 This is the opposite of inward FDI from a foreign investor into Israel. The Bettencourt Meyers family’s Téthys SAS holding company does not publish a comprehensive portfolio disclosure; Israeli investment exposure via that vehicle cannot be confirmed or excluded (Evidence Gap 7). No Israeli state ownership, sovereign wealth fund stakes, or Israeli institutional investor majority positions within L’Oréal’s ownership structure have been identified.
Sourcing relationships. L’Oréal’s primary raw material sourcing connection to the Israel/Palestine region is cosmetic-grade Dead Sea minerals — magnesium, potassium, and bromide-based ingredients incorporated into specific skincare and spa product lines.50 The Dead Sea straddles Israeli-controlled and Jordanian territory; available documentation does not resolve which shoreline supplies L’Oréal’s inputs (Evidence Gap 1). No direct commercial contracts with Israeli agricultural aggregators or West Bank settlement-based producers have been identified. L’Oréal is not named in War on Want’s 2021 settlement goods labelling report, which focused on UK food importers and supermarkets.51
Regulatory compliance. No documented DEFRA enforcement actions, HMRC customs audit findings, or EU labelling enforcement actions specifically naming L’Oréal for settlement-origin labelling non-compliance have been identified. The EU Court of Justice ruling in Case C-363/18 (2019) requiring settlement-origin labelling applies in principle to any L’Oréal products containing settlement-sourced ingredients sold in EU markets, but the Dead Sea sourcing geography remains unresolved.52 No NGO monitoring database specifically cites L’Oréal as a procurer or re-seller of mislabelled settlement-origin goods.
The strongest challenge to the I-ECON score of 5.50 is that the BOLD hub, if confirmed as ongoing and involving active equity investment rather than passive scouting, would be more appropriately scored at Band 7.0+ (Core R&D or Strategic Investment). The counter-argument is well-grounded: the available 2018–2019 documentation explicitly describes a scout-level function, not a full engineering presence, and no post-2020 corporate disclosure upgrades that characterisation. Confirmation of sustained, active R&D engineering at scale would be the single most consequential evidence gap in this domain.
The Israeli revenue quantum is entirely unknown from public sources (Evidence Gap 4). If Israel represented, for example, more than 1% of global L’Oréal revenue (~€400M+ at 2023 revenue levels), that would support a higher Magnitude score. The conservative Magnitude scoring at 4.50 reflects the small documented headcount, the absence of manufacturing, and Israel’s treatment as a non-strategic subsumed market in all investor communications. Confidence in the Magnitude score is moderate.
The Dead Sea mineral sourcing gap (Evidence Gap 1) could, if resolved to show West Bank or settlement-territory extraction, add an occupied-territory dimension to the supply chain analysis. However, Dead Sea mineral sourcing from either shoreline does not constitute a settlement-related sourcing relationship under standard occupied-territory definitions, which focus on West Bank Area C and Gaza. The Jordanian shoreline alternative further limits the policy relevance of this gap.
The OurCrowd relationship specifics (Evidence Gap 5) and the post-October 2023 operational status of the BOLD hub (Evidence Gap 6) both represent genuine uncertainty. If the BOLD hub has been wound down following the October 2023 conflict escalation — as some multinationals have quietly adjusted Israeli operations — the I-ECON score could fall modestly. No public evidence supports such a downward adjustment, and the subsidiary itself remains the primary scoring driver regardless.
| Entity | Type | Relevance | Finding |
|---|---|---|---|
| L’Oréal Israel Ltd. | Wholly-owned subsidiary | Core V-ECON presence | Confirmed operational; Tel Aviv office; 50–200 employees 1547 |
| Diplomat Distributors | Israeli distributor | Consumer products logistics | Historical importer-of-record relationship; current status unresolved 48 |
| BOLD Tel Aviv Hub | Innovation function | Startup-scouting / venture engagement | Scout-level, 2018–2019; post-2022 status unresolved 349 |
| OurCrowd | Israeli venture platform | Ecosystem engagement | Cited 2021; precise relationship unresolved 7 |
| SkinGPT | Israeli AI startup | Beauty-tech engagement | NoCamels documented L’Oréal involvement 2023 11 |
| Start-Up Nation Central | Israeli innovation body | Ecosystem membership documentation | L’Oréal cited as active 2022–2023 10 |
| Dead Sea minerals | Raw material input | Sourcing geography | Mineral inputs confirmed; shoreline sourcing unresolved 50 |
| Téthys SAS | French family holding company | Parent ownership vehicle | ~33% L’Oréal stake; Israeli investment portfolio undisclosed 18 |
| Bettencourt Meyers family | Beneficial owner | Dominant shareholder | Controls Téthys; Fondation Bettencourt Schueller: no Israel grants identified |
| Nestlé S.A. | Former shareholder | Historical ownership | Fully exited September 2014 19 |
| Euronext Paris | Stock exchange | Corporate registration | L’Oréal listed as CAC 40 component 53 |
| AMF | French securities regulator | Corporate disclosure oversight | Mandatory disclosure framework; no Israel-specific enforcement 54 |
| UN OHCHR Business Database | International body | Settlement activity database | L’Oréal not confirmed included 30 |
| War on Want | NGO | Settlement labelling report | L’Oréal not named as subject 51 |
| Who Profits Research Center | NGO database | Commercial operations entry | Entry focused on commercial ops; confirms market presence 29 |
| Corporate Occupation | NGO database | Occupation-economy profiling | No specific military or settlement-origin sourcing finding 55 |
| EU Court of Justice (C-363/18) | Judicial body | Settlement labelling ruling | Applies in principle; no enforcement action against L’Oréal 52 |
| DEFRA | UK regulator | Produce labelling enforcement | No L’Oréal citation identified 56 |
The V-POL domain captures L’Oréal’s political and governance conduct in relation to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, including corporate communications, lobbying, financial contributions, executive advocacy, and institutional affiliations. The domain score of 0.89 reflects a documented political double standard — selective silence on Gaza against a clear precedent of named conflict statements — combined with the complete absence of active political advocacy, lobbying expenditure, donations, or state affiliations in favour of Israel. Proximity is scored at 8.50 (direct corporate decision-maker) because the silence is L’Oréal’s own governance choice, not mediated through a subsidiary or partner.
The double standard finding. The core V-POL finding is precisely documented. L’Oréal issued named, conflict-specific public statements in two directly comparable situations: a named corporate statement explicitly suspending Russian operations within days of the February 2022 Ukraine invasion, citing “the situation in Ukraine” and expressing solidarity with affected populations,5758 and a named racial equity commitment letter in June 2020 following the Black Lives Matter movement, including specific pledges on representation and hiring.59 No equivalent named statement was identified regarding the Israel-Gaza conflict at any point from October 2023 through April 2025.6061
This contrast is analytically significant because it distinguishes L’Oréal’s Gaza silence from generic multinational passivity. L’Oréal has demonstrated institutional willingness and capacity to issue named conflict-specific statements when it has determined the reputational case to do so. Its silence on Gaza is therefore a detectable departure from its own established pattern — a selective omission — rather than simply default corporate inaction. This maps to the rubric’s Double Standard (Selective Silence) band (I-POL 2.1–3.0) rather than the Business-as-Usual band.
Magnitude calibration. Magnitude is scored at 2.50 because the behaviour being measured is an act of omission — sustained silence from October 2023 through April 2025 — with no active resource deployment. There are no lobbying dollars directed at Israel-Palestine policy, no donations to Israeli advocacy organisations, no corporate statements amplifying an Israeli government narrative, and no directed deployment of L’Oréal’s consumer platform reach in support of Israeli political objectives. The omission is sustained but passive; it does not constitute the active suppression, systemic bias, or resource deployment that would justify a higher Magnitude score.
Active conduct audit. The audit record across all active political conduct categories is uniformly nil. L’Oréal’s EU Transparency Register lobbying declarations cover cosmetics regulation, ingredient safety, digital commerce, and environmental standards; no declared lobbying activity on Israel-Palestine policy, BDS legislation, or Middle East trade policy appears.62 OpenSecrets and FARA records for L’Oréal USA show lobbying focused on cosmetics ingredient regulation, FDA policy, and supply chain matters; no Israel-Palestine lobbying is identified.63 No corporate donations to the Friends of the IDF, the Jewish National Fund, or any pro-Israel advocacy organisation have been identified. No L’Oréal crisis asset mobilisation (product donations, logistics support, infrastructure) directed at Israeli state or military-aligned NGOs has been identified during the October 2023–April 2025 period.60
Territorial presence and regulatory scrutiny. L’Oréal operates through its Israeli subsidiary and distributor network with no identified direct manufacturing, production, or logistics facilities within internationally recognised occupied territories.6465 L’Oréal does not appear on the 2023 UN Human Rights Council database of businesses with activities in Israeli settlements.66 Who Profits does not maintain a dedicated military or state-partnership profile for L’Oréal.29 No regulatory actions, litigation, or formal international-body findings specifically naming L’Oréal in connection with occupied-territory operations have been identified. The EU Court of Justice ruling in Case C-363/18 (2019) requiring settlement-origin goods labelling applies in principle but has not been enforced against L’Oréal.52
Institutional affiliations. The L’Oréal-UNESCO “For Women in Science” programme is a global multilateral science award open to researchers worldwide; Israeli scientists have received awards under this programme in multiple years. This is not a targeted state partnership or geopolitical sponsorship arrangement, and it is not scored as a V-POL indicator. No evidence has been identified that L’Oréal has accepted formal state honours from the Israeli government, hosted Israeli government officials at corporate events, or participated in Israeli government-organised “Brand Israel” cultural diplomacy campaigns.65
Employee relations and internal governance. HuffPost France reported in November 2023 that some L’Oréal employees in France expressed internal concern about the company’s silence on Gaza, calling for a public statement.65 No evidence of formal disciplinary actions, terminations, or HR enforcement actions against employees for conflict-related speech has been identified. L’Oréal’s Ethics and Compliance Charter governs employee political expression consistent with standard French multinational practice, but no evidence indicates this policy was specifically invoked in connection with the Israel-Gaza conflict.67
Executive and board conduct. No public statements, op-eds, signed letters, or documented social media activity by CEO Nicolas Hieronimus or other senior executives specifically addressing the Israel-Gaza conflict were identified. No L’Oréal board member holds a declared leadership role in Israeli state-aligned institutions, AIPAC, JNF, or equivalent geopolitical lobbying organisations, based on the 2023 URD board disclosure.65 The Fondation Bettencourt Schueller focuses on life sciences research, arts and crafts, and humanitarian causes in France; no evidence identifies Middle East or Israel-Palestine-related grants.68
The strongest challenge to the Double Standard characterisation is the argument that multinational corporate silence on armed conflicts — even conflicts generating global attention — is standard commercial practice driven by stakeholder risk management rather than geopolitical alignment. The counter to this is that L’Oréal’s own conduct in 2020 and 2022 establishes that it does not in fact follow a blanket silence policy; it selectively chooses when to speak. The audit acknowledges that French CAC 40 companies largely maintained quiet on Israel-Gaza in late 2023, meaning L’Oréal’s inaction was not anomalous among its Paris-listed peer group — a genuine mitigating factor. However, the peer group baseline does not erase the within-company precedent comparison.
A second challenge concerns the scope of the comparison. The Ukraine statement involved L’Oréal directly suspending operations — a material business action with disclosed financial implications — whereas a Gaza statement would not necessarily have been tied to any operational change. This asymmetry somewhat weakens the comparison’s analytical force. The BLM statement is arguably a closer comparator (no operational suspension, a values-based communication), and no equivalent BLM-type statement on Palestinian civilian casualties was issued.
Key evidence gaps in this domain include: disaggregated Israeli revenue (not publicly disclosed, preventing assessment of financial materiality of the silence decision); granular data on whether L’Oréal’s Israeli distributors supply products to retail outlets within West Bank settlements (no public logistics data available); and a detailed audit of Fondation Bettencourt Schueller grants for Middle East or Israel-Palestine-related giving (the foundation publishes limited grant-level detail). None of these gaps, if resolved adversely, would change the domain band — the Double Standard finding is well-evidenced and the active conduct categories are comprehensively nil.
| Entity | Type | Relevance | Finding |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nicolas Hieronimus | CEO (since 2021) | Executive advocacy check | No public statements on Gaza identified 65 |
| Bettencourt Meyers family | Beneficial owner | Shareholder / philanthropic conduct | No Israel-related statements or donations identified 68 |
| Fondation Bettencourt Schueller | Family foundation | Philanthropic conduct | Focus: life sciences, arts, French humanitarian causes; no Israel grants 68 |
| Téthys SAS | French holding company | Ownership vehicle | Portfolio undisclosed; Israeli exposure unresolved 18 |
| L’Oréal Israel Ltd. | Subsidiary | Operational presence | Commercial subsidiary; no state-alignment indicators 15 |
| BDS Movement | Civil society | Boycott campaign | L’Oréal listed; grounds are commercial presence 27 |
| Palestine Solidarity Campaign (UK) | Civil society | Boycott campaign | Commercial presence grounds; no military supply allegation 28 |
| Al Jazeera | Media | Boycott campaign documentation | Reported consumer pressure on cosmetics brands Nov 2023 14 |
| HuffPost France | Media | Internal employee reporting | Reported internal employee concern about Gaza silence Nov 2023 65 |
| UN OHCHR HRC Database | International body | Settlement activity database | L’Oréal not confirmed included 66 |
| EU Transparency Register | Regulatory | Lobbying declarations | Cosmetics/environmental focus; no Israel lobbying declared 62 |
| OpenSecrets / FARA | Regulatory | US lobbying records | Cosmetics/FDA focus; no Israel lobbying identified 63 |
| Friends of the IDF (FIDF) | Pro-Israel organisation | Potential donation target | No L’Oréal donation identified 65 |
| Jewish National Fund (JNF) | Pro-Israel organisation | Potential donation target | No L’Oréal donation identified 65 |
| L’Oréal-UNESCO “For Women in Science” | Global science award | Potential state partnership | Global multilateral program; not scored as bilateral state partnership 69 |
| EU Court of Justice (C-363/18) | Judicial body | Settlement labelling obligation | Applies in principle; no enforcement action against L’Oréal 52 |
| AMF | French securities regulator | Corporate disclosure oversight | No Israel-specific enforcement action 54 |
Across all four domains, the most structurally significant evidence gap is the undisclosed cybersecurity vendor stack (V-DIG). Enterprise-scale French multinationals of L’Oréal’s profile frequently deploy Israeli-origin cybersecurity tooling (CyberArk, Check Point, SentinelOne, Wiz) without public disclosure. Confirmation of a named contract would raise V-DIG from 0.07 to approximately 0.64, moving the composite from 233 to approximately 238 — a negligible change that would not affect tier classification.
The BOLD Tel Aviv hub post-2023 operational status (Evidence Gap 6, V-ECON/V-DIG) is the second most structurally significant gap. If the hub were confirmed as a sustained active R&D engineering operation rather than a startup-scouting function, I-ECON could rise to Band 7.0 (Core R&D), increasing V-ECON from 3.54 to approximately 6.00 and pushing the composite score to approximately 385 — still within Tier D but at the upper boundary. The available 2019 descriptions do not support this characterisation, and no post-2020 disclosure upgrades it.
The Dead Sea mineral sourcing geography (Evidence Gap 1, V-ECON) is a genuine ambiguity but analytically bounded. Dead Sea extraction from either the Israeli or Jordanian shoreline does not by definition constitute a settlement-territory sourcing relationship. The occupied-territory labelling framework (C-363/18) addresses West Bank Area C and Gaza, not the Dead Sea itself (which lies on the Israel-Jordan border). The gap therefore has limited scoring consequence.
The Téthys SAS portfolio opacity (Evidence Gap 7, V-ECON) cannot be resolved from public sources. If Téthys were found to hold direct positions in Israeli sovereign bonds or Israel-focused funds, that would be scored under V-ECON rather than attributed to L’Oréal’s corporate conduct per se, and the quantum would be unknown.
The Ukrainian precedent comparison in V-POL is the domain’s most contestable analytical element. The argument that suspension of Russian operations (a material business decision with financial consequences) is not comparable to issuing a humanitarian statement about Gaza is legitimate and partially mitigating. The BLM comparison is a more appropriate structural parallel and supports the Double Standard finding independently.
No single evidence gap, if resolved adversely, would move L’Oréal out of Tier D or above a composite score of approximately 380. A move above Tier D (to Tier C: 400–599) would require either a confirmed full-scale R&D engineering centre in Israel or confirmed active advocacy, lobbying, or significant donations — none of which is supported by current evidence.
| Entity | Category | Domains | Key Finding |
|---|---|---|---|
| L’Oréal S.A. | Target company | All | French multinational; CAC 40; no defence or political advocacy relationships 17 |
| L’Oréal Israel Ltd. | Subsidiary | V-ECON, V-POL | Wholly-owned; Tel Aviv; 50–200 employees; commercial operations 1547 |
| Nicolas Hieronimus | CEO | V-POL | No public statements on Gaza 65 |
| Bettencourt Meyers family | Beneficial owner | V-ECON, V-POL | ~33% via Téthys SAS; no Israel advocacy 18 |
| Téthys SAS | Holding company | V-ECON | Owns ~33% L’Oréal; portfolio undisclosed 18 |
| Fondation Bettencourt Schueller | Foundation | V-POL | French focus; no Israel grants identified 68 |
| ModiFace | Subsidiary (Canadian) | V-DIG | AR beauty try-on; Canadian-origin; not surveillance 236 |
| BOLD Tel Aviv Hub | Innovation function | V-ECON, V-DIG | Scout-level, 2018–2019; current status unresolved 349 |
| Google Cloud | Technology vendor | V-DIG | Named AI/analytics partner; not Israeli-domiciled 4 |
| Microsoft Azure | Technology vendor | V-DIG | Named preferred cloud partner; not Israeli-domiciled 5 |
| SAP | Technology vendor | V-DIG | Named ERP partner 20 |
| Salesforce | Technology vendor | V-DIG | Named CRM partner 9 |
| OurCrowd | Israeli venture platform | V-ECON | Ecosystem engagement 2021; relationship specifics unresolved 7 |
| SkinGPT | Israeli AI startup | V-ECON, V-DIG | L’Oréal engagement documented 2023 11 |
| Elbit Systems | Israeli defence prime | V-MIL | No L’Oréal reference in filings 23 |
| Israel Aerospace Industries | Israeli defence prime | V-MIL | No L’Oréal reference in filings 24 |
| Rafael Advanced Defense Systems | Israeli defence prime | V-MIL | No L’Oréal reference in filings 25 |
| SIPRI | Research database | V-MIL | No L’Oréal arms industry entry 21 |
| Who Profits Research Center | NGO | V-MIL, V-DIG, V-ECON, V-POL | Commercial presence entry; no military or tech-provider findings 29 |
| UN OHCHR Business Database | International body | V-MIL, V-POL | L’Oréal not confirmed included 3066 |
| BDS Movement | Civil society | V-MIL, V-DIG, V-POL | Boycott on commercial presence grounds; no military allegation 27 |
| Palestine Solidarity Campaign (UK) | Civil society | V-MIL | Commercial presence grounds 28 |
| EU Court of Justice (C-363/18) | Judicial body | V-ECON, V-POL | Settlement labelling ruling; no enforcement against L’Oréal 52 |
| Diplomat Distributors | Israeli distributor | V-ECON | Historical consumer goods logistics; current status unresolved 48 |
| Start-Up Nation Central | Israeli innovation body | V-ECON | L’Oréal cited as active in ecosystem 2022–2023 10 |
| Nestlé S.A. | Former shareholder | V-ECON | Fully exited September 2014 19 |
| Domain | I | M | P | V-Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| V-MIL | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
| V-DIG | 1.50 | 1.50 | 1.50 | 0.07 |
| V-ECON | 5.50 | 4.50 | 8.00 | 3.54 |
| V-POL | 2.50 | 2.50 | 8.50 | 0.89 |
V-MAX: 3.54 (V-ECON) — Sum_OTHERS: 0.96 — BRS: ((3.54 + 0.96 × 0.2) / 16) × 1000 = 233 — Tier: D (200–399)
V-ECON dominates because it combines a confirmed operational presence (I = 5.50, Operational Presence band) with direct 100% corporate ownership as the active parent (P = 8.00). V-POL contributes via the 0.2 blending factor: the Double Standard finding (I = 2.50) is amplified by high Proximity (P = 8.50, direct corporate decision) but moderated by the passive nature of the omission (M = 2.50). V-DIG’s minimal contribution (0.07) reflects the absence of any confirmed Israeli-origin named vendor; if a named cybersecurity vendor were confirmed, V-DIG would approximately double but the effect on the composite would remain below 5 score points. V-MIL is zero with high confidence across all three criteria.
High-confidence findings (all domains): The V-MIL zero score; the direct ownership and operational status of L’Oréal Israel Ltd.; the documentation of named Ukraine and BLM statements against Gaza silence; the absence of lobbying, FIDF/JNF donations, or military supply relationships; the Canadian origin of ModiFace.
Moderate-high confidence: The I-ECON band at 5.50 (Operational Presence); the V-POL Double Standard characterisation; the absence of Israeli-origin named cybersecurity vendors from public records.
Moderate confidence (unresolved evidence gaps):
Open questions: Does L’Oréal’s enterprise cybersecurity stack include Israeli-origin vendors? Has the BOLD Tel Aviv hub been wound down, maintained, or expanded following October 2023? What is the precise Dead Sea mineral sourcing geography? Has L’Oréal made any non-public operational adjustments to its Israeli presence following the October 2023 conflict escalation?
Tier D score (233) supports the following calibrated recommendations:
For institutional due diligence users: The V-ECON subsidiary presence (L’Oréal Israel Ltd., BOLD hub engagement) is confirmed and scoring-relevant. Standard ESG screens applying a de minimis commercial-presence threshold will capture L’Oréal. The V-MIL nil finding provides high confidence that no defence supply chain relationship exists; this should be reflected in any risk-classification that distinguishes commercial presence from weapons supply. No public evidence supports an elevated-risk classification for military, weapons, or strategic technology supply.
For supply chain and procurement officers: The Dead Sea mineral sourcing geography (Evidence Gap 1) warrants a direct inquiry to L’Oréal’s ingredient supply team. A public sourcing audit or supplier disclosure confirming Jordanian-shoreline or certified non-settlement extraction would close the most practically resolvable V-ECON gap. L’Oréal’s Supplier Code of Conduct does not currently address conflict-territory sourcing; advocates seeking policy change have a specific and documented gap to raise.70
For campaign and advocacy organisations: The documented V-POL Double Standard (confirmed named Ukraine/BLM statements against confirmed Gaza silence) is the most publicly contestable finding and the most amenable to direct engagement. Formal requests to L’Oréal under the Business and Human Rights Resource Centre’s response mechanism could produce a public corporate statement addressing the gap.71 Framing the ask around the company’s own precedent rather than broader BDS grounds may be more productive, given that BDS campaign targeting has not generated a public L’Oréal response to date.
For BDS campaign researchers: The composite score of 233 places L’Oréal in Tier D — operationally present in the Israeli economy but without a military, strategic technology, or active political advocacy dimension. Evidence-based communications should accurately reflect this: L’Oréal’s scored involvement is a commercial subsidiary presence and a political silence, not a weapons, surveillance, or defence contracting relationship. Overstating the V-MIL or V-DIG dimensions would weaken the evidential credibility of the campaign.
Score-contingent caveats: All recommendations above are calibrated to the current score of 233. Confirmation of a scaled Israeli R&D engineering centre (potential composite: ~385) or confirmed active political advocacy (composite uplift dependent on nature and scale) would warrant reassessment. The most productive investigative priority is the BOLD Tel Aviv hub post-2022 operational status.
L’Oréal corporate history — https://www.loreal.com/en/articles/group/our-history/ ↩↩
Reuters — L’Oréal acquires ModiFace — https://www.reuters.com/article/us-loreal-modiface/loreal-acquires-modiface-idUSKCN1GR1YU ↩↩↩↩↩
Globes — L’Oréal Tel Aviv tech hub — https://en.globes.co.il/en/article-loreal-opens-tech-hub-in-israel-1001285000 ↩↩↩↩↩↩
L’Oréal — Google Cloud partnership announcement — https://www.loreal.com/en/news/group/loreal-and-google-cloud-announce-partnership/ ↩↩↩↩↩
Microsoft — L’Oréal Azure partnership — https://news.microsoft.com/2020/01/loreal-microsoft-azure/ ↩↩↩↩↩
L’Oréal — Racial equity commitment — https://www.loreal.com/en/news/commitments/commitment-to-fight-against-racism/ ↩
OurCrowd — L’Oréal ecosystem engagement — https://blog.ourcrowd.com/loreal-ourcrowd/ ↩↩↩↩
L’Oréal — Ukraine statement — https://www.loreal.com/en/news/group/loreal-statement-ukraine/ ↩
Salesforce — L’Oréal partnership press release — https://www.salesforce.com/news/press-releases/2022/loreal-partnership/ ↩↩↩↩
Start-Up Nation Central — L’Oréal BOLD — https://startupnationcentral.org/company/loreal-bold/ ↩↩↩↩
NoCamels — L’Oréal SkinGPT engagement — https://nocamels.com/2023/04/loreal-skingpt-israeli-ai/ ↩↩↩↩
Al Jazeera — Boycott calls against cosmetics brands — https://www.aljazeera.com/economy/2023/11/9/calls-to-boycott-luxury-cosmetics-brands-over-israel-ties ↩
Al Jazeera — Boycott calls against cosmetics brands — https://www.aljazeera.com/economy/2023/11/9/calls-to-boycott-luxury-cosmetics-brands-over-israel-ties ↩↩
L’Oréal — Articles of Association — https://www.loreal-finance.com/en/governance/articles-of-association ↩
L’Oréal Annual Report 2023 — https://www.loreal-finance.com/en/annual-report-2023/ ↩↩↩↩↩↩↩↩↩↩↩↩↩
L’Oréal — Shareholder structure — https://www.loreal-finance.com/en/shareholders/shareholder-structure/ ↩↩↩↩↩↩
Reuters — Nestlé L’Oréal exit — https://www.reuters.com/article/us-nestle-loreal-idUSKBN0H20Y820140910 ↩↩↩↩
SAP — L’Oréal digital core partnership — https://news.sap.com/loreal-digital-core-partnership/ ↩↩↩↩
SIPRI arms transfers database — https://www.sipri.org/databases/armstransfers ↩↩↩
SIPRI Yearbook 2023 — https://www.sipri.org/publications/2023/sipri-yearbooks/sipri-yearbook-2023 ↩
Elbit Systems investor relations — https://ir.elbitsystems.com/ ↩↩↩
Rafael Advanced Defense Systems — https://www.rafael.co.il/ ↩↩↩
ECCHR — Business and human rights — https://www.ecchr.eu/en/topic/business-and-human-rights/ ↩
BDS Movement — Economic boycott — https://bdsmovement.net/act/economic-boycott ↩↩↩↩
Palestine Solidarity Campaign — https://www.palestinecampaign.org/ ↩↩↩↩
Who Profits Research Center — https://whoprofits.org/ ↩↩↩↩↩↩
UN OHCHR — Database of business enterprises — https://www.ohchr.org/en/hr-bodies/hrc/sessions/database-business-enterprises ↩↩↩↩
Forensic Architecture — https://forensic-architecture.org/ ↩
SIBAT — Israel Defence Export Directorate — https://www.mod.gov.il/Defence_System/DefenceExport/Pages/default.aspx ↩
AFSC Investigate database — https://investigate.afsc.org/ ↩
Forensic Architecture — https://forensic-architecture.org/ ↩
CyberArk investor relations — https://investors.cyberark.com/annual-reports ↩↩
L’Oréal — BOLD startup fund — https://www.loreal.com/en/articles/innovation/loreal-startup-fund/ ↩
Technion — Corporate relations — https://www.technion.ac.il/en/industry/corporate-relations/ ↩↩
Yissum — Partnerships — https://www.yissum.co.il/en/partnerships ↩↩
Alibaba Cloud — L’Oréal partnership — https://www.alizila.com/loreal-alibaba-cloud-partnership/ ↩
Wiz — Fortune 500 customers — https://www.wiz.io/blog/wiz-fortune-500-customers ↩
Oosto — Retail — https://oosto.com/industries/retail/ ↩
BriefCam — Retail — https://www.briefcam.com/industries/retail/ ↩
Trax — Case studies — https://traxretail.com/resources/case-studies/ ↩
Publicis Sapient — L’Oréal — https://www.publicissapient.com/clients/loreal ↩
European Patent Office — L’Oréal ModiFace patents — https://worldwide.espacenet.com/patent/search?q=loreal+modiface+biometric ↩
LinkedIn — L’Oréal Israel — https://www.linkedin.com/company/loreal-israel/ ↩↩↩
L’Oréal Annual Results 2023 press release — https://www.loreal-finance.com/en/news/press-releases/annual-results-2023/ ↩↩↩↩
L’Oréal — BOLD open innovation programme — https://www.loreal.com/en/articles/science-and-technology/bold-business-opportunities-for-loreal-development/ ↩↩↩
Haaretz — Dead Sea cosmetics and L’Oréal — https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/business/2017-04-12/ty-article/dead-sea-cosmetics-loreal/0000017f-e3ce-df9c-a17f-fbce4c4b0000 ↩↩
War on Want — Settlement goods labelling report 2021 — https://waronwant.org/media/settlement-goods-labelling-report-2021 ↩↩
CJEU — Case C-363/18 — https://curia.europa.eu/juris/document/document.jsf?docid=220544&doclang=EN ↩↩↩↩↩
Euronext — L’Oréal listing — https://live.euronext.com/en/product/equities/FR0000120321-XPAR ↩
AMF — Corporate governance — https://www.amf-france.org/en/regulated-entities/public-companies/corporate-governance ↩↩
Corporate Occupation — L’Oréal — https://www.corporateoccupation.org/company/loreal ↩
UK DEFRA — West Bank produce labelling guidance — https://www.gov.uk/guidance/labelling-of-food-produced-in-the-west-bank-or-the-gaza-strip ↩
L’Oréal — Ukraine statement — https://www.loreal.com/en/news/group/loreal-statement-ukraine/ ↩
Reuters — L’Oréal suspends Russian operations — https://www.reuters.com/business/loreal-suspends-operations-russia-2022-03-11/ ↩
L’Oréal — Racial equity commitment — https://www.loreal.com/en/news/commitments/commitment-to-fight-against-racism/ ↩
L’Oréal Annual Report 2023 — https://www.loreal-finance.com/en/annual-report-2023 ↩↩
L’Oréal Annual Report 2022 — https://www.loreal-finance.com/en/annual-report-2022 ↩
EU Transparency Register — L’Oréal lobbying — https://ec.europa.eu/transparencyregister/public/consultation/displaylobbyist.do?id=54418110&locale=en ↩↩
OpenSecrets — L’Oréal lobbying — https://www.opensecrets.org/orgs/loreal/lobbying?id=D000022061 ↩↩
L’Oréal Annual Report 2022 — https://www.loreal-finance.com/en/annual-report-2022 ↩
L’Oréal Universal Registration Document 2023 — https://www.loreal-finance.com/en/annual-report-2023/universal-registration-document ↩↩↩↩↩↩↩↩↩
UN OHCHR HRC — Database of business enterprises — https://www.ohchr.org/en/hr-bodies/hrc/regular-sessions/session31/database-business-enterprises ↩↩↩
L’Oréal — Ethics and compliance — https://www.loreal.com/en/commitments-and-responsibilities/ethics/ ↩
L’Oréal — Commitments and responsibilities — https://www.loreal.com/en/commitments-and-responsibilities/for-the-future/ ↩↩↩↩
L’Oréal — Beauty Tech — https://www.loreal.com/en/articles/beauty-tech/ ↩
L’Oréal — Supplier Code of Conduct — https://www.loreal.com/en/commitments-and-responsibilities/for-the-future/respecting-human-rights/supplier-code-of-conduct/ ↩
Business & Human Rights Resource Centre — L’Oréal — https://www.business-humanrights.org/en/companies/loreal/ ↩