Creative Living off the Margins of the Niger Delta: Implications for Corporate Governance

Stanislaus E. Nwaigwe
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

The distribution and privatization channels of the wealth from Niger Delta’s oil and gas resources are multiple. The main channels excessively favor mainly office holders, international entrepreneurs and their contractors. The rest of the population, or the less favored majority will have to cut their share of the wealth via the alternative channels which may include violent insurgencies. This work focuses on one of these alternative channels, where an Igbo community creatively sustain their access to the oil wealth. An ethnographic study of Egbema, shows that the local population modify their traditional practices to sustain the flow of the oil wealth. This modifying capacity was manifest when they creatively transformed a fishing festival that was traditionally celebrated exclusively, into a public fish bazaar. This was done to keep hold of the money received as compensation for the land expropriated for oil extraction by Shell Petroleum Development Company (SPDC). This has implications for corporate governance, especially with regard to the relationship between companies and other stakeholders.
尼日尔三角洲边缘的创造性生活:对公司治理的启示
尼日尔三角洲油气资源财富的分配和私有化渠道多种多样。主要渠道主要偏向于办公室职员、国际企业家和他们的承包商。其余的人,或者不太受欢迎的大多数人,将不得不通过其他渠道削减他们的财富份额,其中可能包括暴力叛乱。这项工作的重点是这些替代渠道之一,伊博社区创造性地维持他们获得石油财富的途径。一项关于Egbema的人种学研究表明,当地居民改变了他们的传统习俗,以维持石油财富的流动。当他们创造性地将传统上只庆祝的钓鱼节转变为公共鱼集市时,这种修改能力就显现出来了。这样做是为了保留壳牌石油开发公司(SPDC)征收采油土地的补偿款。这对公司治理,特别是公司与其他利益相关者之间的关系有影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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