The Effect of Respect, Trust, and Fear in Adversarial Stakeholder Relationships: A Case Study on Water Commodification and Stakeholder Engagement
Date
2011-03-31
Authors
McGinley, Mark
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Dalhousie Journal of Interdisciplinary Management
Abstract
Academic discussion around stakeholder engagement has been focused on the attributes of the various stakeholders rather than on the relationship between the stakeholders. This paper examines the role that intangible variables - respect, fear, and trust - play in stakeholder relationships that are characterized by intractable conflict. That role is explored through a case study of stakeholder groups with adversarial positions on the commodification and export of Canada’s freshwater. Through discussion of the relationship between two sets of stakeholders with conflicting interests on Canada’s freshwater commodification respect, fear, and trust are advanced as the key intangible variables that create the underlying conflict. With these root causes identified the paper explores methods to build respect, reduce fear, and establish trust among stakeholders in an effort to shift their relationship from primarily adversarial to collaborative in the hopes of facilitating constructive dialogue.
Description
Keywords
Stakeholder Theory, Stakeholder Engagement, Conflict, Water Commodification, Adversarial Relationships, Climate Change, NAFTA, GATT, Water Export
Citation
McGinley, M. (2011). The Effect of Respect, Trust, and Fear in Adversarial Stakeholder Relationships: A Case Study on Water Commodification and Stakeholder Engagement. Dalhousie Journal of Interdisciplinary Management, 7, 1-17.