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Social Epistemology
A Journal of Knowledge, Culture and Policy
Volume 28, 2014 - Issue 3-4: Social Licence to Operate
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Abstract

Large companies must increasingly satisfy not only the conditions of their formal licences, but also the concerns and expectations of host communities and broader society. This has led to the emergence, particularly in the minerals industry, of the notion of “social licence”, an interdiscursive term whose meaning is rarely interrogated. We use textual analysis to critically investigate the construction of social licence discourse in minerals companies’ sustainable development reports and at a recent industry conference. We find that the texts mystify the nature of agency, and privilege processes that maintain existing power relations. Through their partial accommodation of heterogeneous discourses, the texts downplay tensions and conflicts. We conclude that there is a need to reconceptualise the nature of company–stakeholder relationships through a more collaborative, dialogic and reflexive process, avoiding the binary state implied by the term licence.

Notes

1 Not all are called “Sustainable Development Reports”. Many are “Sustainability Reports”, a small number are “Social Responsibility Reports” and one is an “Environmental Report”.

2 We also included instances where companies use the US spelling “license”.

3 We analysed the instances of secure closely, as its meaning seems to conflate acquiring and maintaining. We classified it as a “maintaining” process on the basis of instances such as “securing continued access to land and resources” (Anglo American 2006), and “Earning, securing and maintaining trust” (Teck 2006). Nevertheless, this classification remains debatable.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Richard Parsons

Richard Parsons is a social research consultant at the Earth Sciences and Resource Engineering, Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, P.O. Box 883, Kenmore, QLD 4069, Australia.

Kieren Moffat

Kieren Moffat is a team leader at the Resource Futures, Earth Sciences and Resource Engineering, Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, P.O. Box 883, Kenmore, QLD 4069, Australia.

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