Corporate social responsibility in the case of Rio Tinto and rural community of KwaNdaya and Port Dunford.
Date
2020
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Abstract
In 2004 Richards Bay Minerals, a subdivision of Rio Tinto, the multibillion global mining
company that specialises in titanium, iron ore, and zircon signed an agreement to expand mining
in northern KwaZulu-Natal on the Zulti South Mineral Lease Area situated in the rural
communities of KwaNdaya and Port Dunford. Residents of these two impoverished communities
expected a new dawn through the company’s Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) programmes.
This study was conducted to explore CSR as a potential tool for socio-economic development in
the KwaNdaya and Port Dunford. It used Primitive Accumulation, Accumulation by
Dispossession and Parity of Participation theories as frameworks to understand why Corporate
Social Responsibility continues to fail in achieving social justice. Qualitative methods were used
to extract information from sustainable development reports and compare the findings based on
knowledge, attitudes and opinions of the 18 participants who reside in the two host communities.
The findings reveal that community members in KwaNdaya and Port Dunford are aware of what
is happening around them, but lack knowledge on how to fight the hierarchal system which has
made decisions on their behalf while they remain in chronic poverty. Development by
Dispossession continues to loot South African communities by wearing a mask of Corporate Social
Responsibility (CSR) to access mineral wealth in rural peripheries. There are endless promises
about community development, and the findings show that these benefit Traditional Authority
representatives. As a result, unfulfilled CSR promises remains the major cause of conflict and
community unrest in mining host communities around South Africa.
Description
Masters Degree. University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban.