6533b7d0fe1ef96bd125a541

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Trust, mistrust and distrust as blind spots of Social Licence to Operate: illustration via three forerunner countries in nuclear waste management

Markku LehtonenMarkku LehtonenMarkku LehtonenTuija JarttiMika KariTapio LitmanenMatti Kajo

subject

Distrustsocial licence (to operate)517 Political sciencenuclear waste managementStrategy and ManagementBlind spotmedia_common.quotation_subjectGeneral EngineeringGeneral Social SciencesRadioactive wastetrustloppusijoitusyleinen mielipidehyväksyttävyysPublic administrationydinjätteetluottamusPolitical sciencedistrustSafety Risk Reliability and Qualitymistrustmedia_common

description

The notion of social licence to operate (SLO) has become a widely applied concept for companies in mining and resource extraction industries to manage their social and community relations, in the face of local criticism and opposition. SLO literature and practice have highlighted earning the trust of the local community as a key requirement for an SLO. This article addresses three weaknesses in how the current SLO literature addresses trust. The arguments are illustrated via examples from nuclear waste management in Finland, France and Sweden–three forerunners in implementing high-level nuclear waste repository projects. Nuclear waste management constitutes a relevant case for analysis, as an industry that faces significant risk-related challenges of local acceptance, ethics, economics, and democratic debate. Focussing on the oft-used SLO framework of Boutilier and Thomson, with its emphasis on interactional and institutionalised trust between the company and the local community, we address three gaps in the SLO literature: 1) insufficient conceptualisation of trust, in particular the dynamics between different dimensions of trust, mistrust and distrust; 2) lack of attention to the potential virtues of mistrust and distrust; and 3) the downsides of taking the institutionalisation of trust as the ultimate criterion of a strong SLO, especially in contexts entailing significant asymmetries of power. The article concludes by suggesting ways of alleviating the identified weaknesses, via greater recognition of the multidimensionality of trust, mistrust and distrust, the virtues of mistrustful civic vigilance, and greater attention to trust dimensions that lie beyond the community-company relations. publishedVersion Peer reviewed

https://doi.org/10.1080/13669877.2021.1957987