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  1.  54
    Preventing The Oil “Resource Curse” In Ghana: Lessons From Nigeria.Eyene Okpanachi & Nathan Andrews - 2012 - World Futures 68 (6):430 - 450.
    Ghana joined the list of oil-producing countries with the export of its first oil from the Jubilee oilfield in January 2011. President John Atta Mills's statement drawing attention to the potential paradigm shift as well as risks that the discovery of oil and gas imposes not only speaks to the complexity of extractive-industry-engendered development, but it also makes it imperative that the country learns from other countries? successes and failures. In this article, we use the ?resource curse? thesis to examine (...)
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  2.  11
    A S wiss‐Army Knife? A Critical Assessment of the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI) in G hana.Nathan Andrews - 2016 - Business and Society Review 121 (1):59-83.
    Within the current global atmosphere where a universally accepted police force is nonexistent, there are several voluntary norms and codes of conduct that exist to guide how corporations behave worldwide. These have come as a result of many years of poor performance in the areas of social, financial, and environmental responsibility. Such norms are expected to prescribe and proscribe certain types of corporate behavior but when one examines the reality on the ground, the story is not that straightforward. This article (...)
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    Manifestations of corporate social responsibility as sensemaking and sensegiving in a hydrocarbon industry.Nathan Andrews - 2021 - Business and Society Review 126 (2):211-234.
    There is a large body of literature that examines different dimensions of corporate social responsibility (CSR) in Africa, with many focusing on the false promises of these corporate initiatives. Contrary to simplistic claims of CSR being merely window-dressing, however, this paper reveals that although several rhetorical proclamations underpin the idea, such statements are often given instrumental meaning through diverse mechanisms (e.g., interpretation of cues toward the proactive (re)construction of identity, (inter)subjective discourses on social legitimacy, and acts of “issue selling”) that (...)
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