This research compares corporate-sponsored community development (CD) and social legitimacy at two co-located mining operations in Chile (one private and one state owned) to explore the contribution of CD to social licence to operate. The research identifies that varied approaches to corporate-sponsored CD and its outcomes have the potential to either enhance or undermine social licence to operate, but that the relationship between the mine and community, the presence of negative environmental and social impacts, and social development associated with the core activities of the mining project are more significant factors affecting legitimacy. The research used a methodology that consisted of a review of corporate sustainability reports and ...
Since the liberalisation of its investment regime in the 1990s, Argentina has seen a rise in foreign...
Responsible mining requires a company to engage with local communities throughout all stages of thei...
This article analyses the ways in which major, multinational mining companies operating within Austr...
Mining is an important industry in Peru, but local communities where mining takes place do not perce...
MA (Development and Management), North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2016South African mini...
The present ethnographic research explores the socio-economic repercussions of a copper mining opera...
viii, 176 leaves : ill. ; 29 cm.Includes abstract.Includes bibliographical references (leaves 158-17...
This thesis is a compilation and analyses of research into Social License to Operate as applied to t...
Scholars of extractive industry investment in developing countries concede, generally, that the adop...
The role of corporations in societal outcomes continues to grow. Mining companies now face the expec...
The community mining space remains contested for a range of complex reasons. This inherently difficu...
Establishing "social licencs to operate" with communities has become a significant corporate social ...
ABSTRACT The social license to operate (SLO) began as a metaphor for the ability of communities to s...
© 2018 Elsevier Ltd Social licence to operate has become an integral part of the discourse around so...
In the Atacama Desert, Chile, there are a number of small mining operations that have a history of s...
Since the liberalisation of its investment regime in the 1990s, Argentina has seen a rise in foreign...
Responsible mining requires a company to engage with local communities throughout all stages of thei...
This article analyses the ways in which major, multinational mining companies operating within Austr...
Mining is an important industry in Peru, but local communities where mining takes place do not perce...
MA (Development and Management), North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2016South African mini...
The present ethnographic research explores the socio-economic repercussions of a copper mining opera...
viii, 176 leaves : ill. ; 29 cm.Includes abstract.Includes bibliographical references (leaves 158-17...
This thesis is a compilation and analyses of research into Social License to Operate as applied to t...
Scholars of extractive industry investment in developing countries concede, generally, that the adop...
The role of corporations in societal outcomes continues to grow. Mining companies now face the expec...
The community mining space remains contested for a range of complex reasons. This inherently difficu...
Establishing "social licencs to operate" with communities has become a significant corporate social ...
ABSTRACT The social license to operate (SLO) began as a metaphor for the ability of communities to s...
© 2018 Elsevier Ltd Social licence to operate has become an integral part of the discourse around so...
In the Atacama Desert, Chile, there are a number of small mining operations that have a history of s...
Since the liberalisation of its investment regime in the 1990s, Argentina has seen a rise in foreign...
Responsible mining requires a company to engage with local communities throughout all stages of thei...
This article analyses the ways in which major, multinational mining companies operating within Austr...