Corporate social (ir)responsibility: an analysis of the disaster in Mariana-Brazil

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Mirian Albert Pires
Luciana Mourão
Fátima Bayma de Oliveira
Jose Antonio Puppim de Oliveira

Abstract

The issue of corporate social irresponsibility (CSIR) has gained prominence in world literature. This study analyzes the 2015 environmental disaster caused by Samarco Mineração S.A. in Mariana (MG), Brazil, as an example of CSIR. The objective was to understand whether the population’s social identification with the company, which is translated into the economic benefits, reduced punitive intention, and blame attribution. The research instrument uses scales with psychometric indicators applied to 1,616 individuals. It was verified that the benefits to the local economy reduced the punitive intention in the municipalities of Anchieta and Guarapari (ES), and Mariana (MG). This was not the case for Colatina and Linhares (ES). Also, it was observed that the disaster’s severity increased blame attribution, and the punitive intention increased the intention to engage in negative word-of-mouth (NWOM) about the company. As the main conclusion, people were less likely to punish the company in the municipalities where it generated economic benefits.

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How to Cite
Pires, M. A., Mourão, L., Oliveira, F. B. de, & Oliveira, J. A. P. de. (2020). Corporate social (ir)responsibility: an analysis of the disaster in Mariana-Brazil. Brazilian Journal of Public Administration, 54(5), 1188–1206. Retrieved from https://periodicos.fgv.br/rap/article/view/82208
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