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  4. Cerrejón and Colombia’s Guajira region: From protracted company-community conflict to earning a social license to operate?
 
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Cerrejón and Colombia’s Guajira region: From protracted company-community conflict to earning a social license to operate?

Auteur(s)
Villadiego De La Hoz, Stephanie 
Institut de management 
Reuter, Emmanuelle 
Institut de management 
Date de parution
2022-5-2
In
The Case Center
No
Reference no. 722-0035-1
De la page
1
A la page
28
Mots-clés
  • corporate social responsibility
  • business and human rights
  • firm-stakeholder relationships
  • stakeholder management
  • CSR
  • legal/regulatory environment
  • conflict management
  • protracted conflict
  • corporate social resp...

  • business and human ri...

  • firm-stakeholder rela...

  • stakeholder managemen...

  • CSR

  • legal/regulatory envi...

  • conflict management

  • protracted conflict

Résumé
Cerrejon, a large-scale open-pit coal mine in Colombia that started operating in the early 1980s, has received multiple national awards and recognition for the various corporate social responsibility (CSR) initiatives and programs it has implemented in recent years. Despite these initiatives, however, Cerrejon faces increasing stakeholder claims and continues to have conflictive relationships with local communities owing to differing interests relating to the use, management, appropriation, utilization, exploration, exploitation, conservation, and protection of environmental resources. The case documents the history of the relationship between Cerrejon and local communities. It introduces the mine’s history and of Cerrejon's mining and CSR activities. It traces the company's management of its social and environmental impacts in light of the applicable international standards. The case sheds particular light on the issues that underpin the company's conflictive relationship with local communities, who have a stake in the territory exploited by the company's mining activities. The case concludes with open questions concerning how Cerrejon, having increased its CSR activities while facing increased stakeholder claims, should continue to manage its relationship with local communities, to maintain or achieve a 'social license to operate' going forward.
Identifiants
https://libra.unine.ch/handle/123456789/30199
Autre version
https://casecent.re/p/184535
Type de publication
review
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