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Performing transparency, embracing regulations: corporate framing to mitigate environmental conflicts
Journal article

Performing transparency, embracing regulations: corporate framing to mitigate environmental conflicts

Erik Kojola and Amanda McMillan Lequieu
Environmental sociology, v 6(4), pp 364-374
01 Oct 2020

Abstract

elites environmental conflicts Framing legitimization resource extraction science
This paper compares two cases of contested mining proposals in the Upper Midwest region of the U.S. to examine how mining companies attempt to respond to opposition and secure regulatory approval . Combining analysis of company documents, regulatory reports, media coverage, and interviews about proposed copper-nickel mining in Minnesota and iron mining in Wisconsin, this paper assesses the discursive framing used by company elites as they seek to mitigate public concerns about environmental risks. We demonstrate how companies use environmental regulations and the scientific information needed for regulatory compliance to circumnavigate environmental conflicts. Specifically, we show how companies characterize their role within the institutional contexts of site fights as that of good corporate citizens, embracing the rigor of the regulatory processes, proposing new technologies to manage environmental risks, and managing the dissemination of scientific knowledge with stakeholders. Rather than taking the bottom-up perspective common to research on site fights, we advance research on elite framing, corporate social responsibility, and expertise by highlighting how companies embrace regulations and perform transparent expertise in attempts to assert legitimacy in contested mining contexts. This paper offers a critical analysis of how elites of capitalism use regulations and voluntary information disclosure, two factors often viewed as antithetical to natural resource development, to attempt to circumnavigate on-the-ground contestation of new projects. 

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Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
Web of Science research areas
Environmental Studies
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