Resumen:
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[EN] Purpose: By considering the organizational legitimacy framework, this work examines how offending
companies decouple their narratives from the facts as a communication strategy when handling
environmental crises in ...[+]
[EN] Purpose: By considering the organizational legitimacy framework, this work examines how offending
companies decouple their narratives from the facts as a communication strategy when handling
environmental crises in the Latin American context. It also considers the implications of such behavior
in terms of its potential inconsistency with the organizational value system, and therefore with the
ethical sense of the crisis communication practice.
Design/methodology: The research relies on a multi-case study approach, where four major
environmental incidents involving four extractive companies in Venezuela, Colombia, Mexico, and
Argentina are analyzed. By scrutinizing public sources, these companies¿ crisis communication processes
are examined to allow for the linking of theory and practice.
Findings: Results obtained suggest that to defend their legitimacy, companies deliberately conveyed
untruthful messages and decouple their communication in crisis from reality, which in turn exposes a
delinking between values and actions, resulting in ethical concerns for the practice of both crisis
management and crisis communication. This work identifies four different decoupling-based crisis
communication strategies performed by companies and the way these are accompanied by secondary
strategies.
Research limitations/implications: By emphasizing the connection between legitimacy and crisis
communication, the study illustrates how narrative-fact decoupling (i.e., untruthful crisis communication
practices) can be an indicative of more profound organizational contradictions. However, due to the
constraints of case studies, it is acknowledged that the results obtained have boundaries for
generalization.
Originality/value: Instead of approaching decoupling as a trigger for crisis, the present investigation
considers decoupling as a communicational strategy some companies engage with, when handling crisis.
Furthermore, by focusing on Latin America, the study reflects the potential impact that the geographical
context may have on the bodies of knowledge of organizational crisis communication and legitimacy.
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