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Divergent stakeholder views of corporate social responsibility in the Australian forest plantation sector

Date

Authors

Gordon, Melissa
Lockwood, Michael
Vanclay, Frank
Hanson, Dallas
Schirmer, Jacqueline

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Publisher

Environment Institute of Australia and New Zealand

Abstract

Although the Australian forest plantation industry acknowledges that there is a role for corporate social responsibility (CSR) in forest management, there is confusion as to what this constitutes in practice. This paper describes the conflicts between internal and external stakeholder views on CSR in plantation forestry. We conducted in-depth interviews with key informants across three plantation management regions in Australia: Tasmania, the Green Triangle and south-west Western Australia. We interviewed a range of stakeholders including forest company employees, local councils, Indigenous representatives, and environmental non-government organisations. CSR-related initiatives that stakeholders believed were important for plantation management included the need for community engagement, accountability towards stakeholders, and contribution to community development and well-being. Although there was wide support for these initiatives, some stakeholders were not satisfied that forest companies were actively implementing them. Due to the perception that forest companies are not committed to CSR initiatives such as community engagement, some stakeholder expectations are not being satisfied.

Description

Citation

Source

Australasian Journal of Environmental Management

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Access Statement

License Rights

Restricted until

2037-12-31