Por favor, use este identificador para citar o enlazar este ítem: http://hdl.handle.net/10644/10040
Tipo de Material (Spa): Tesis Maestría
Título : Social Licence to Operate: Assessing ENI’s Legitimacy, Credibility, and Trust in the Val D’Agri Concession
Autor : Tagliavini, Sofia
Director de Tesis: Diantini, Alberto
Descriptores / Subjects : EXTRACTIVISMO
IMPACTO AMBIENTAL
IMPACTO SOCIAL
COMUNIDADES RURALES
CONFLICTOS AMBIENTALES
SOCIAL LICENCE TO OPERATE, SLO
EXTRACTIVISM
Identificador de lugar: ITALIA - BASILICATA - VAL D'AGRI
Fecha de Publicación : 2022
Ciudad: Editorial : Padua, IT: Università Degli Studi Di Padova. Dipartimento di Ingegneria Civile, Edile e Ambientale
Paginación: 123 p.
Cita Sugerida : Tagliavini, Sofia. Social Licence to Operate: Assessing ENI’s Legitimacy, Credibility, and Trust in the Val D’Agri Concession. Padua, 2022-2023, 123 p. Thesis (International Master’s Degree in Sustainable Territorial Development: Climate Change, Diversity and Cooperation / Maestría en Cambio Climático, Sustentabilidad y Desarrollo). Università Degli Studi Di Padova. Dipartimento di Ingegneria Civile, Edile e Ambientale / Universidad Andina Simón Bolívar, Sede Ecuador. Área de Ambiente y Sustentabilidad.
Código: TC-0003
Descripción : In the past two decades a high level of attention has been drawn to the dynamics of the extractive sector and its socio-environmental implications. Especially in the framework of both Social and Environmental Impact Assessment, the concept of Social Licence to Operate (SLO) has been increasingly discussed and tested by academia and industries representatives. Social Licence to Operate (SLO) can be considered as the ongoing acceptance and approval a company has from local community members and other stakeholders that can affect profitability. Driving from the definition, conceptualization and discussion around the term, the present research adopts the model originally developed by Thomson and Boutilier (2011) and later extended by Jijelava and Vanclay (2017) to assess the relationship between communities and the oil company Ente Nazionale Idrocarburi (ENI) in Basilicata, Italy. Focusing on the three key components of SLO - legitimacy, credibility, and trust – the acceptance level from local communities is explored through a longitudinal study in Val D’Agri, the area hosting the concession's main facilities and therefore located at the heart of extractive activities. Through the use of a qualitative methodology and semi-structured interviews directed to local key stakeholders, the research will provide a picture of the current level of approval, acceptance or withdrawal provided by the community to the company while challenging the concept of SLO; how and to what extent SLO could be a useful tool to assess real-life dynamics, and could SLO be used as method of analysis and assessment of socio-environmental conflicts?
URI : http://hdl.handle.net/10644/10040
Aparece en las colecciones: Maestría en Cambio Climático, Sustentabilidad y Desarrollo / Joint Master’s degree in Sustainable Territorial Development, STeDe: Climate Change, Diversity, Cooperation

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