“…In content analysis, it is recommended that a set of categories be established into which data can be coded (Stray, ), and the current study has developed broad categories of social issues (e.g., water, stakeholder engagement, environmental compliance, sustainable benefits for communities, rights and engagement of indigenous peoples, and human rights) rather than responsibility types (e.g., economic and legal); this categorization method has been suggested to have more potential to enhance theoretical understanding and empirical testing (Jamali, ). Also, these social issues are categorized by materiality quadrant, and this prevents a clearer investigation of the social issues linked with materiality quadrant (Spiller, ; Turker, , ; Waddock, ).…”