Grenoble, Décembre 2009
Business and conflict, business and peace.
This dossier invites to think about corporate responsibility in the particular context of failed states and / or illegitimate ones (fragile states, dictatorships). In those situations where the state does not fulfil its role of protecting populations and regulating relations in society, don’t companies have an increased responsibility? Its activities, decisions and the effects of its actions have important political impacts. We discuss 3 types of situations:
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1. Where the business activity feeds a conflict;
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2. The case of authoritarian regimes where, as a result of oppression, civil society cannot express its opposition and organize protests in the face of socio-political conflicts;
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3. The role of peacemaker, in cases where companies helped put an end to conflict by for example bringing parties together.
It is the relations between different actors that this dossier is planning to study, mainly between 3 players: the public sector (state), private (business), civil society. In this setting, the company is regarded as a player in the conflict in its own right that can fuel, prevent or help to resolve it.
A company’s responsibility is studied throughout the production or distribution chain of a company’s activity: access to raw materials, working conditions, distribution and consumption. Therefore the following topics are covered: power relations between actors, competition for natural resources, privatization or regionalization of security, management of the common good, working conditions, legal national frameworks and multinational as a new player in international relations.
These themes are developed through several case studies:
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Shell and instability in the Niger Delta ;
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Cotton oppressor in Central Asia ;
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The gold mines in Mali ;
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Coca-Cola India and the sharing of water ;
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The « conflict diamonds » and the response of the diamond sector.
Documents
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Private sector development in a stateless
Grenoble, 2008
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Doing business is power politics
An analysis of structures underlying current power relationships.
Claske DIJKEMA, Saint Hilaire du Touvet, November 2008
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Oil conflict in the Niger Delta
A case-study using the multi-actor approach.
Claske DIJKEMA, Grenoble, August 2009
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As a result of internationalisation and in the absence of a clear international framework regulating the rights and responsibilities of corporations, their responsibility in today’s world is above all a debate. It leads to the question of the relationship between corporations and the State and feeds into a much larger societal and philosophical debate about the organisation of society. The fact that no easy answers are given is logic if we realise that the essence of the debate is the diffusion of power. The article focuses on the question of corporate social responsibility in cases where the State fails to protect the interest of the population.
Claske DIJKEMA, Grenoble, August 2009
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Civil society challenging Shell’s power in Nigeria.
Claske DIJKEMA, Saint Hilaire du Touvet, November 2008
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A dispute between the citizen of Plachimada and the Coca-Cola Company.
Alexia Stainer, Grenoble, November 2008
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Citizens requesting the governance of diamond exploitation
The Kimberly process as response.
Alexia Stainer, Saint Hilaire du Touvet, November 2008
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Privatisation, mining and displacement challenged by a Zambian NGO. An interview with Teresa Chewe of the Southern Africa Center for the constructive resolution of disputes SACCORD, Lusaka, Zambia.
Claske DIJKEMA, Grenoble, August 2009