Disentangling Benefit-Sharing Complexities of Oil Extraction on the North Slope of Alaska

This paper analyses benefit-sharing arrangements between oil companies, native corporations, the North Slope Borough, and Indigenous Peoples in Alaska. It aims to disentangle the complexities of benefit-sharing to understand existing procedural and distributive equity. We identified benefit-sharing regimes involving modes, principles, and mechanisms of benefit-sharing. This includes modes that reflect institutionalized interactions, such as paternalism, company centered social responsibility (CCSR), partnership, and shareholders. Principles can be based on compensation, investment and charity. Mechanisms can involve negotiated benefits and structured benefits, mandated by legislation, contracts, or regulation. Furthermore, mechanisms can involve semi-formal and trickle-down benefits. Trickle-down benefits come automatically to the community along with development. The distribution of money by the North Slope Borough represents the paternalistic mode, yet involves investment and mandated principles with top–down decision making. They are relatively high in distributional equity and low in participatory equity. Native corporations predominantly practice the shareholders’ mode, investment principle, and mandated mechanisms. The oil companies’ benefit-sharing represents a mixed type combining CCSR and partnership modess, several principles (investment, compensatory, charity) and multiple types of mechanisms, such as mandated, negotiated, semi-formal and trickle-down. These arrangements vary in terms of distributive equity, and participatory equity is limited.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Tysiachniouk, M.
Format: Article/Letter to editor biblioteca
Language:English
Subjects:Alaska, Arctic, Indigenous Peoples, benefit-sharing, distributive equity, oil production, participatory equity,
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/disentangling-benefit-sharing-complexities-of-oil-extraction-on-t
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spelling dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-5666662024-10-30 Tysiachniouk, M. Article/Letter to editor Sustainability 12 (2020) 13 ISSN: 2071-1050 Disentangling Benefit-Sharing Complexities of Oil Extraction on the North Slope of Alaska 2020 This paper analyses benefit-sharing arrangements between oil companies, native corporations, the North Slope Borough, and Indigenous Peoples in Alaska. It aims to disentangle the complexities of benefit-sharing to understand existing procedural and distributive equity. We identified benefit-sharing regimes involving modes, principles, and mechanisms of benefit-sharing. This includes modes that reflect institutionalized interactions, such as paternalism, company centered social responsibility (CCSR), partnership, and shareholders. Principles can be based on compensation, investment and charity. Mechanisms can involve negotiated benefits and structured benefits, mandated by legislation, contracts, or regulation. Furthermore, mechanisms can involve semi-formal and trickle-down benefits. Trickle-down benefits come automatically to the community along with development. The distribution of money by the North Slope Borough represents the paternalistic mode, yet involves investment and mandated principles with top–down decision making. They are relatively high in distributional equity and low in participatory equity. Native corporations predominantly practice the shareholders’ mode, investment principle, and mandated mechanisms. The oil companies’ benefit-sharing represents a mixed type combining CCSR and partnership modess, several principles (investment, compensatory, charity) and multiple types of mechanisms, such as mandated, negotiated, semi-formal and trickle-down. These arrangements vary in terms of distributive equity, and participatory equity is limited. en application/pdf https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/disentangling-benefit-sharing-complexities-of-oil-extraction-on-t 10.3390/su12135432 https://edepot.wur.nl/525994 Alaska Arctic Indigenous Peoples benefit-sharing distributive equity oil production participatory equity https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Wageningen University & Research
institution WUR NL
collection DSpace
country Países bajos
countrycode NL
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-wur-nl
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname WUR Library Netherlands
language English
topic Alaska
Arctic
Indigenous Peoples
benefit-sharing
distributive equity
oil production
participatory equity
Alaska
Arctic
Indigenous Peoples
benefit-sharing
distributive equity
oil production
participatory equity
spellingShingle Alaska
Arctic
Indigenous Peoples
benefit-sharing
distributive equity
oil production
participatory equity
Alaska
Arctic
Indigenous Peoples
benefit-sharing
distributive equity
oil production
participatory equity
Tysiachniouk, M.
Disentangling Benefit-Sharing Complexities of Oil Extraction on the North Slope of Alaska
description This paper analyses benefit-sharing arrangements between oil companies, native corporations, the North Slope Borough, and Indigenous Peoples in Alaska. It aims to disentangle the complexities of benefit-sharing to understand existing procedural and distributive equity. We identified benefit-sharing regimes involving modes, principles, and mechanisms of benefit-sharing. This includes modes that reflect institutionalized interactions, such as paternalism, company centered social responsibility (CCSR), partnership, and shareholders. Principles can be based on compensation, investment and charity. Mechanisms can involve negotiated benefits and structured benefits, mandated by legislation, contracts, or regulation. Furthermore, mechanisms can involve semi-formal and trickle-down benefits. Trickle-down benefits come automatically to the community along with development. The distribution of money by the North Slope Borough represents the paternalistic mode, yet involves investment and mandated principles with top–down decision making. They are relatively high in distributional equity and low in participatory equity. Native corporations predominantly practice the shareholders’ mode, investment principle, and mandated mechanisms. The oil companies’ benefit-sharing represents a mixed type combining CCSR and partnership modess, several principles (investment, compensatory, charity) and multiple types of mechanisms, such as mandated, negotiated, semi-formal and trickle-down. These arrangements vary in terms of distributive equity, and participatory equity is limited.
format Article/Letter to editor
topic_facet Alaska
Arctic
Indigenous Peoples
benefit-sharing
distributive equity
oil production
participatory equity
author Tysiachniouk, M.
author_facet Tysiachniouk, M.
author_sort Tysiachniouk, M.
title Disentangling Benefit-Sharing Complexities of Oil Extraction on the North Slope of Alaska
title_short Disentangling Benefit-Sharing Complexities of Oil Extraction on the North Slope of Alaska
title_full Disentangling Benefit-Sharing Complexities of Oil Extraction on the North Slope of Alaska
title_fullStr Disentangling Benefit-Sharing Complexities of Oil Extraction on the North Slope of Alaska
title_full_unstemmed Disentangling Benefit-Sharing Complexities of Oil Extraction on the North Slope of Alaska
title_sort disentangling benefit-sharing complexities of oil extraction on the north slope of alaska
url https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/disentangling-benefit-sharing-complexities-of-oil-extraction-on-t
work_keys_str_mv AT tysiachnioukm disentanglingbenefitsharingcomplexitiesofoilextractiononthenorthslopeofalaska
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