4.3 Article

A social licence to operate: corporate social responsibility, local communities and the constitution of global production networks

Journal

GLOBAL NETWORKS-A JOURNAL OF TRANSNATIONAL AFFAIRS
Volume 15, Issue -, Pages S109-S128

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/glob.12090

Keywords

GLOBAL PRODUCTION NETWORKS; SOCIAL LICENCE TO OPERATE (SLO); CORPORATE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY; RESOURCE EXTRACTION; COMMUNITY

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This article contributes to the theorization of the role of informal regulation (undertaken by leading firms) in the ongoing organization of global production networks. It does so through a qualitative case study of BHP Billiton's Ravensthorpe Nickel Operation (RNO) in the rural Shire of Ravensthorpe in Western Australia. This less tangible, and to date under-researched, dimension of global production networks is foregrounded through a focus on the corporate social responsibility strategy implemented by RNO in the service of achieving and/or demonstrating a broader social licence to operate'. This licence' functions - beyond the corporation - as a legitimated and legitimating multi-scalar mechanism through which to gain and maintain access to mineral resources and thus to establish viable and ongoing global production networks. Further, this informal regulation is shown to shape social relations and qualities of place conducive to competitive global mineral extraction and to facilitate the positioning of local communities and places in mineral global production networks.

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