Stakeholder dialogue, Indigenous peoples´ needs and sustainable development in the Arctic

Description of the granted funding

Stakeholder dialogue is claimed to serve as effective means to peaceful cooperation between companies and its stakeholders. It is however known that businesses favour relations with customers and employees. Recent studies have criticised stakeholder approaches for ignoring political dimensions of dialogue and questions about power and for excluding marginalised stakeholders. The critique also suggests that dialogue takes part in majority languages and that stakeholder theory does not address the fundamental differences in worldviews between stakeholder approach and those marginalised, such as Indigenous peoples. Today, international agreements and financial institutions acknowledge Indigenous peoples as specific rights holders and have new guidelines on benefit sharing and on free prior and informed consent. Yet, the needs and demands of each Indigenous group vary greatly between geographical areas. The Arctic region is home for 400.000 Indigenous people from 50 nations. Meanwhile, the region attracts more economic interest and the development of economic activities should be based on the principles of sustainable development while respect the rights of Indigenous peoples. The aim of this research is to understand the particular needs of Indigenous peoples with the help of a case study located in the Arctic where business activities are currently being developed.
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Starting year

2021

Granted funding

Tiina Jääskeläinen
12 000 €

Funder

KAUTE-säätiö

Funding instrument

Ph.D work

Other information

Funding decision number

KAUTE-säätiö_20200615

Fields of science

SOCIAL SCIENCES

Keywords

Indigenous peoples, stakeholder theory, sustainable development

Identified topics

arctic region