An Oil Company as a Force for Good? How Statoil put Norway’s Identity as a‘ Champion of Ideals’ to the Test
This article explores how Norway’s quest for moral authority to be recognized as a “champion of ideals” came under strain in the 1990s when the Norwegian state’s oil company (Statoil) expanded its operations in- and outside Norwegian borders. While we know a lot about Scandinavia’s international ac...
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Linköping University Electronic Press
2021-07-01
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Series: | Culture Unbound: Journal of Current Cultural Research |
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Online Access: | https://cultureunbound.ep.liu.se/article/view/3366 |
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doaj-9f0bb06ac19f417ba2c893bb29b70ce32021-08-10T15:15:04ZengLinköping University Electronic PressCulture Unbound: Journal of Current Cultural Research2000-15252021-07-0113110.3384/cu.3366An Oil Company as a Force for Good? How Statoil put Norway’s Identity as a‘ Champion of Ideals’ to the TestAda Elisabeth Nissen0University of Oslo This article explores how Norway’s quest for moral authority to be recognized as a “champion of ideals” came under strain in the 1990s when the Norwegian state’s oil company (Statoil) expanded its operations in- and outside Norwegian borders. While we know a lot about Scandinavia’s international activism after the end of the Cold War, we know less about Scandinavian business’ responses to this policy. Neither do we know much about business’ potential impact on this policy. The aim of this article is therefore to begin address this issue by examining Statoil’s response to some of Norway’s moral and ethical aspirations in the post-Cold War global arena. Particular attention is paid to the tension between Norway’s ambition to be an early mover for sustainable development and a human rights advocate, and Statoil’s approach to environmental problems and human rights violations. As such, the article explores the role of state-owned enterprises in profit-making and global expansion during a formative decade when economy became an increasingly important determinant of Norwegian foreign relations, and ethical and moral objectives with roots in earlier decades were revitalized through an unprecedented number of international initiatives. https://cultureunbound.ep.liu.se/article/view/3366StatoilNorwaysustainable developmentstate-owned enterprisesbusiness ethics |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Ada Elisabeth Nissen |
spellingShingle |
Ada Elisabeth Nissen An Oil Company as a Force for Good? How Statoil put Norway’s Identity as a‘ Champion of Ideals’ to the Test Culture Unbound: Journal of Current Cultural Research Statoil Norway sustainable development state-owned enterprises business ethics |
author_facet |
Ada Elisabeth Nissen |
author_sort |
Ada Elisabeth Nissen |
title |
An Oil Company as a Force for Good? How Statoil put Norway’s Identity as a‘ Champion of Ideals’ to the Test |
title_short |
An Oil Company as a Force for Good? How Statoil put Norway’s Identity as a‘ Champion of Ideals’ to the Test |
title_full |
An Oil Company as a Force for Good? How Statoil put Norway’s Identity as a‘ Champion of Ideals’ to the Test |
title_fullStr |
An Oil Company as a Force for Good? How Statoil put Norway’s Identity as a‘ Champion of Ideals’ to the Test |
title_full_unstemmed |
An Oil Company as a Force for Good? How Statoil put Norway’s Identity as a‘ Champion of Ideals’ to the Test |
title_sort |
oil company as a force for good? how statoil put norway’s identity as a‘ champion of ideals’ to the test |
publisher |
Linköping University Electronic Press |
series |
Culture Unbound: Journal of Current Cultural Research |
issn |
2000-1525 |
publishDate |
2021-07-01 |
description |
This article explores how Norway’s quest for moral authority to be recognized as a “champion of ideals” came under strain in the 1990s when the Norwegian state’s oil company (Statoil) expanded its operations in- and outside Norwegian borders. While we know a lot about Scandinavia’s international activism after the end of the Cold War, we know less about Scandinavian business’ responses to this policy. Neither do we know much about business’ potential impact on this policy. The aim of this article is therefore to begin address this issue by examining Statoil’s response to some of Norway’s moral and ethical aspirations in the post-Cold War global arena. Particular attention is paid to the tension between Norway’s ambition to be an early mover for sustainable development and a human rights advocate, and Statoil’s approach to environmental problems and human rights violations. As such, the article explores the role of state-owned enterprises in profit-making and global expansion during a formative decade when economy became an increasingly important determinant of Norwegian foreign relations, and ethical and moral objectives with roots in earlier decades were revitalized through an unprecedented number of international initiatives.
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topic |
Statoil Norway sustainable development state-owned enterprises business ethics |
url |
https://cultureunbound.ep.liu.se/article/view/3366 |
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AT adaelisabethnissen anoilcompanyasaforceforgoodhowstatoilputnorwaysidentityasachampionofidealstothetest AT adaelisabethnissen oilcompanyasaforceforgoodhowstatoilputnorwaysidentityasachampionofidealstothetest |
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