Creating Legitimacy in the ISO/CEN Standard for Sustainable and Traceable Cocoa: An Exploratory Case Study Integrating Normative and Empirical Legitimacy
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Voluntary Standards—A Literature Review and A Conceptual Framework for Assessing the Legitimacy
2.1. Defining Legitimacy
2.1.1. Seven Legitimacy Strategies
2.1.2. Literature Review on Legitimacy Strategies
- (1)
- Creating stakeholder categories and balanced representation
- (2)
- Including high-profile actors
- (3)
- Using and referring to expertise
- (4)
- Enabling Transparency
- (5)
- Facilitating active participation through sufficient language skills and the right vocabulary
- (6)
- Practising consensus as a decision-making principle
- (7)
- Balancing market impact versus stringent standards and auditing
- (8)
- Initiation of standards
- (9)
- Creating networks of partnerships
2.2. Conceptual Framework
3. Methodology
Data Collection and Data Analysis
4. Case Introduction—Sustainability Challenges in the Cocoa-Chocolate Industry
4.1. The Commercial Need
4.2. The Technical Need
4.3. The Role of ISO/CEN
5. Analysis and Discussion
5.1. Normative Legitimacy
“There is too much industry. It’s not democratic in my view. Sometimes I think the NGO’s are just there to make the standard legitimate.”(Informant D, Danish Consumer Council, 2016)
“It was the first time that we have decided to join forces with the Danish standard (…), we wanted to see if we could make any changes. I think the conclusion is that our opinions are too far from each other, so we cannot influence the system; our forces are used better outside than inside.”(Informant F, NOAH, 2016)
“I would compare the CEN/ISO with the bachelor’s degree and Fairtrade and UTZ and Rainforest to a master’s degree. We are specialised more in some areas and especially when it comes to the brand value, CEN/ISO don’t have a brand value as such and we will, Fairtrade and the other private standards, have to align to the CEN/ISO to some stage. Turning our back to it is not possible.”(Informant B)
5.2. Empirical Legitimacy Assessment
5.2.1. Internal Empirical Legitimacy
5.2.2. External Empirical Legitimacy
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Ethical Statement
Appendix A
Name | Company/Organisation | Position |
---|---|---|
CEN Secretariat | ||
Informant A | Dansk Standard (Danish Standards Foundation) | Senior Manager, International Affairs |
Danish Mirror Group | ||
Informant B | Fairtrade Mærket Danmark | Head of Products |
Informant C | Toms Gruppen A/S | Head of Corporate Social Responsibility |
Informant D | Forbrugerrådet Tænk (Danish Consumer Council) | Senior Environmental Adviser |
Informant E | Mars Nordics | Nordic Corporate Affairs Director |
Informant F | NOAH—Friends of the Earth Denmark | Volunteer and member of the International Group |
Ghana/Ivory Coast | ||
Informant G | International Cocoa Farmers Organization (ICCFO) | Operations Manager |
Informant H | International Cocoa Farmers Organization (ICCFO) | National representative Ivory Coast |
Informant I | World Cocoa Foundation (WCF) | Country Coordinator—CLP (Ghana and Nigeria) |
External | ||
Informant J | NIRAS International Consulting | Project Manager/Agribusiness Development Consultant |
Informant K | Time Inc. UK | Journalist/Director and Executive Producer |
Informant L | LR Group | Vice President of Business Development, Agricultural Division |
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Legitimacy Strategy | Type of Legitimacy |
---|---|
| Input |
| Input |
| Input |
| Procedural |
| Procedural |
| Procedural |
| Output |
| Input |
| Input/Output |
Type of Legitimacy | Strategy | ISO/CEN Approach: Legitimacy Enhancing | ISO/CEN Approach: Legitimacy Impeding |
---|---|---|---|
Input | Initiating a standard |
|
|
Input | Creating stakeholder categories and balanced representation |
|
|
Input | Including high-profile actors |
|
|
Input | Using and referring to expertise |
|
|
Procedural | Enabling transparency | Procedural transparency
Output transparency
| Procedural transparency
Output transparency
|
Procedural | Facilitating effective participation through sufficient language skills and the right vocabulary |
|
|
Procedural | Practising consensus as a decision-making principle |
|
|
Output | Balancing market impact |
|
|
Output | Creating a network of partnerships |
|
|
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Kusnezowa, D.; Vang, J. Creating Legitimacy in the ISO/CEN Standard for Sustainable and Traceable Cocoa: An Exploratory Case Study Integrating Normative and Empirical Legitimacy. Sustainability 2021, 13, 12907. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132212907
Kusnezowa D, Vang J. Creating Legitimacy in the ISO/CEN Standard for Sustainable and Traceable Cocoa: An Exploratory Case Study Integrating Normative and Empirical Legitimacy. Sustainability. 2021; 13(22):12907. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132212907
Chicago/Turabian StyleKusnezowa, Dina, and Jan Vang. 2021. "Creating Legitimacy in the ISO/CEN Standard for Sustainable and Traceable Cocoa: An Exploratory Case Study Integrating Normative and Empirical Legitimacy" Sustainability 13, no. 22: 12907. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132212907
APA StyleKusnezowa, D., & Vang, J. (2021). Creating Legitimacy in the ISO/CEN Standard for Sustainable and Traceable Cocoa: An Exploratory Case Study Integrating Normative and Empirical Legitimacy. Sustainability, 13(22), 12907. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132212907