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Corporate Social Responsibility and Natural Resource Conflict (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R4,272
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Corporate Social Responsibility and Natural Resource Conflict (Hardcover)
Series: Routledge Research in Sustainability and Business
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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This book examines the possibilities and limitations of corporate
social responsibility in minimising the violent conflict often
associated with natural resource exploitation. Through detailed and
penetrating empirical analysis, the author skilfully asks why
previous corporate social responsibility practices have not always
achieved their aims. This theme is explored though an analysis of
two of the most complex and protracted conflicts linked to natural
resources in the Asia Pacific region: Bougainville (Papua New
Guinea) and West Papua (Indonesia). Drawing on first-hand accounts
of corporate executives and communities affected by resource
conflict, this book documents the translation of global corporate
social responsibility into local peace. Covering topics as diverse
as post-colonialism, law, revenue distribution, security, the
environment and customary reconciliation, this ambitious text
reveals how and why current corporate social responsibility
initiatives may be unable to assist extractive companies avoid
social conflict. The study concludes that this is attributable to
the failure of extractive companies to respond to the social and
environmental issues of most concern to local host communities. The
idea is that extractive companies could actively contribute to
peace building if they were to engage with the interdependencies
between business activity and the root causes of conflict. What
sets this book apart is that it offers a holistic framework for
extractive companies to engage with the complexity of resource
conflict. 'Interdependent Engagement' is an integrated model of
corporate social responsibility that encourages extractive
companies to deal with the underlying causes of resource conflict,
rather than applying solutions or critiques of their symptoms.
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