首页> 外文期刊>Resources policy >Maintaining legitimacy of a contested practice: How the minerals industry understands its 'social licence to operate'
【24h】

Maintaining legitimacy of a contested practice: How the minerals industry understands its 'social licence to operate'

机译:维护有争议做法的合法性:矿产行业如何理解其“经营社会许可证”

获取原文
获取原文并翻译 | 示例
       

摘要

Recent decades have witnessed growing concern among communities, governments and other stakeholders regarding the adverse social and environmental impacts of corporate activity. This concern has generated various interdiscursive notions, such as corporate social responsibility (CSR), corporate citizenship, the stakeholder concept, and sustainable development (SD), that purport to enable managers to manage business in a 'responsible' or 'sustainable' manner. This discursive landscape now commonly includes 'social licence' or 'social licence to operate', a term that has gained greatest currency in the minerals industry. Literature on social licence is sparse, but encapsulates a diversity of notions such as demands and expectations, legitimacy, credibility, and trust, and free, prior and informed consent. Perhaps most fundamentally, the concept of social licence suggests that stakeholders may threaten a company's legitimacy and ability to operate through boycotts, picketing, or legal challenges. Yet this interpretation of legitimacy does not mean that stakeholders have the same capacity as regulators to grant or withhold an operation's right to exist. How, then, do managers within companies under these pressures themselves understand social licence? We present findings of interviews with 16 managers in the minerals industry in Australia. We explore how these managers conceptualise social licence in relation to notions such as legitimacy, approval, and consent, how they interpret processes of social licence in practice, and how they differentiate it from concepts such as CSR. Managers' conceptualisations can be categorised into four broad themes: legitimacy; localisation; process and continuum; and manageability. These findings suggest that, while social licence potentially represents a shift in power relations, this shift is constrained by discursive pressures to legitimise mining operations, to restrict social licence issues to the local level, to minimise regulatory impositions, to marginalise dissent, and to manage reputation. Opportunities for strengthening and adapting current understandings of social licence are considered.
机译:最近几十年来,社区,政府和其他利益相关者日益关注公司活动对社会和环境的不利影响。这种担忧产生了各种相互交叉的概念,例如企业社会责任(CSR),企业公民,利益相关者概念和可持续发展(SD),旨在使管理人员能够以“负责任”或“可持续”的方式管理业务。现在,这种话语环境通常包括“社会许可证”或“社会经营许可证”,这个术语在矿产行业中获得了最大的成功。关于社会许可的文献很少,但包含了各种概念,例如需求和期望,合法性,信誉和信任,以及自由,事先和知情同意。也许最根本的是,社会许可的概念表明,利益相关者可能会通过抵制,纠察或法律挑战来威胁公司的合法性和运营能力。然而,对合法性的这种解释并不意味着利益相关者具有与监管者相同的能力,可以授予或保留一项业务的生存权。那么,公司内部的经理们如何在这些压力下自己理解社会许可?我们介绍了对澳大利亚矿产行业16位经理的采访结果。我们将探讨这些管理者如何根据合法性,批准和同意等概念来概念化社会许可,如何在实践中解释社会许可的过程,以及如何将其与诸如CSR之类的概念区分开。管理者的概念可以分为四个主题:合法性;本土化;过程和连续性;和可管理性。这些发现表明,尽管社会许可有可能代表着权力关系的转变,但这种转变受到了将采矿业务合法化,将社会许可问题限制在地方层面,将监管规定降到最低,将异议边缘化和管理的压力的压力。声誉。考虑了加强和适应当前对社会许可的理解的机会。

著录项

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
  • 专利
获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号