Social Licence to Irrigate: The Boundary Problem

Author(s)
Shepheard, Mark
Martin, Paul
Publication Date
2008
Abstract
The ability of an irrigation business to use water depends on having a property right to access water, but exercise of this right also depends on government decisions to allocate water or invest in water infrastructure. While this secure property right may be necessary, it is far from sufficient. A social licence is also needed. It has been suggested that a legal 'duty of care', or triple bottom line reporting will protect that social licence. This article suggests that such rhetoric masks a fundamental management problem of the lack of boundaries to social accountability. Managers face a conflict between their legal duties to manage the enterprise in the (economic) interests of its owners and the vaguely defined expectation that they will meet unspecified social obligations.
Citation
Social Alternatives, 27(3), p. 32-39
ISSN
1836-6600
0155-0306
Link
Language
en
Publisher
Social Alternatives
Title
Social Licence to Irrigate: The Boundary Problem
Type of document
Journal Article
Entity Type
Publication

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