14 research outputs found
The value of names: civil society, information, and governing multinationals on the global periphery
Civil society plays a crucial role in governance where laws and authority are weak. Increas-ingly,
multinationals operate in these complex environments. We study how a key strategy of international
civil society—disseminating information about human rights abuse—impacts multi-nationals. To do
so, we focus on trends at the center of international campaigns: the assassination of activists, and
collect 20 years of data related to murders associated with the global mining sector. Using event
study methodology, we estimate the impact of human rights reporting on the stock price of firms
connected to events. We find that the effect of the human rights spotlight is substantial. Firms named
in assassination coverage have large, negative abnormal returns following assassinations. Our
estimates imply a median loss in market capitalization of 100 million USD. Meanwhile, these events
do not impact the social responsibility scores of firms. We show that the media plays a crucial role in
these effects: the negative impact of assassinations is strongest when they coincide with calm news
cycles versus peak news cycles, when news may be crowded out by large, international stories. In
addition, we argue our results are driven by events where companies are explicitly named in the
reporting. Last, we show that assassinations are positively related to the royalties paid by mining
projects to domestic governments. JEL: O16, O17, D74, G3, G14, L8
Exposure to natural hazard events unassociated with policy change for improved disaster risk reduction
Natural hazard events provide opportunities for policy change to enhance disaster risk reduction (DRR), yet it remains unclear whether these events actually fulfill this transformative role around the world. Here, we investigate relationships between the frequency (number of events) and severity (fatalities, economic losses, and affected people) of natural hazards and DRR policy change in 85 countries over eight years. Our results show that frequency and severity factors are generally unassociated with improved DRR policy when controlling for income-levels, differences in starting policy values, and hazard event types. This is a robust result that accounts for event frequency and different hazard severity indicators, four baseline periods estimating hazard impacts, and multiple policy indicators. Although we show that natural hazards are unassociated with improved DRR policy globally, the study unveils variability in policy progress between countries experiencing similar levels of hazard frequency and severity.TRAMPOLINE - exploring the transformative potential of extreme weather event