Mining and Indigenous Livelihoods
Rights, Revenues, and Resistance
Herausgeber: Rodon, Thierry; Keeling, Arn; Thériault, Sophie
Mining and Indigenous Livelihoods
Rights, Revenues, and Resistance
Herausgeber: Rodon, Thierry; Keeling, Arn; Thériault, Sophie
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This book maps the encounters between Indigenous Peoples and local communities with mining companies in various post-colonial contexts. It will be of great interest to students and scholars of mining and the extractive industries, sustainable development, natural resource management, and Indigenous Peoples.
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This book maps the encounters between Indigenous Peoples and local communities with mining companies in various post-colonial contexts. It will be of great interest to students and scholars of mining and the extractive industries, sustainable development, natural resource management, and Indigenous Peoples.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd (Sales)
- Seitenzahl: 332
- Erscheinungstermin: 22. August 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 21mm
- Gewicht: 658g
- ISBN-13: 9781032516288
- ISBN-10: 1032516283
- Artikelnr.: 70526766
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd (Sales)
- Seitenzahl: 332
- Erscheinungstermin: 22. August 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 21mm
- Gewicht: 658g
- ISBN-13: 9781032516288
- ISBN-10: 1032516283
- Artikelnr.: 70526766
Thierry Rodon is a professor in the Department of Political Science at Université Laval, Canada, and holds the INQ Research Chair in Northern Sustainable Development. Sophie Thériault is a full professor in the University of Ottawa's Faculty of Law (Civil Law Section), Canada, where she served as vice-dean, Academic (2019-2023), and as vice-dean, Graduate Studies (2015-2017). Arn Keeling is a settler-scholar and professor of geography at Memorial University of Newfoundland and Labrador in St. John's, Canada. Séverine Bouard is a human geographer (PhD) at IAC, New Caledonia. Andrew Taylor is an associate professor of demography at the Northern Institute of Charles Darwin University in Australia.
Introduction Part 1: Indigenous Peoples, Law, and Politics 1. The space
left for Indigenous Peoples' voices in Canadian and Fennoscandian mining
legal frameworks 2. Closure and connection: A Southwest Pacific reappraisal
of the mining enclave 3. Foreign investor accountability for the violation
of Indigenous Peoples' rights in international investment law and
arbitrations 4. Power relationships, institutions, and mining Part 2:
Braiding Indigenous Views in the Mining Cycle 5. Indigenous Peoples'
relationships to large-scale mining in post/colonial contexts 6.
Environmental assessment as a knowledge infrastructure 7. Realizing
Indigenous rights: Effective implementation of agreements between
Indigenous Peoples and the extractive industry 8. Comparative perspectives
on the social aspects of mine closure and mine site transition in Canada
and Australia Part 3: Navigating Relationships with Indigenous Communities
9. Understanding the silent dimensions of social acceptability of a lithium
project in the Cree community of Nemaska 10. Lateral violence: Effects of
external pressures on Indigenous communities Part 4: Indigenous Women and
Resource Development 11. Employment trends for Indigenous women working in
the Northern Territory's large-scale mining industry 12. Rhetoric versus
reality: Understanding employment inequities for Inuit women in mining 13.
A mine for women? Trajectories of Kanak women in the nickel industry in New
Caledonia 14. Conclusion Postface: MinErAL Partner Reflections A: How
MinErAL helped expose and share the realities of mining development in the
Nunavik region B: The impact of the MinErAL Project from the perspective of
a Kanak working for Koniambo Nickel
left for Indigenous Peoples' voices in Canadian and Fennoscandian mining
legal frameworks 2. Closure and connection: A Southwest Pacific reappraisal
of the mining enclave 3. Foreign investor accountability for the violation
of Indigenous Peoples' rights in international investment law and
arbitrations 4. Power relationships, institutions, and mining Part 2:
Braiding Indigenous Views in the Mining Cycle 5. Indigenous Peoples'
relationships to large-scale mining in post/colonial contexts 6.
Environmental assessment as a knowledge infrastructure 7. Realizing
Indigenous rights: Effective implementation of agreements between
Indigenous Peoples and the extractive industry 8. Comparative perspectives
on the social aspects of mine closure and mine site transition in Canada
and Australia Part 3: Navigating Relationships with Indigenous Communities
9. Understanding the silent dimensions of social acceptability of a lithium
project in the Cree community of Nemaska 10. Lateral violence: Effects of
external pressures on Indigenous communities Part 4: Indigenous Women and
Resource Development 11. Employment trends for Indigenous women working in
the Northern Territory's large-scale mining industry 12. Rhetoric versus
reality: Understanding employment inequities for Inuit women in mining 13.
A mine for women? Trajectories of Kanak women in the nickel industry in New
Caledonia 14. Conclusion Postface: MinErAL Partner Reflections A: How
MinErAL helped expose and share the realities of mining development in the
Nunavik region B: The impact of the MinErAL Project from the perspective of
a Kanak working for Koniambo Nickel
Introduction Part 1: Indigenous Peoples, Law, and Politics 1. The space
left for Indigenous Peoples' voices in Canadian and Fennoscandian mining
legal frameworks 2. Closure and connection: A Southwest Pacific reappraisal
of the mining enclave 3. Foreign investor accountability for the violation
of Indigenous Peoples' rights in international investment law and
arbitrations 4. Power relationships, institutions, and mining Part 2:
Braiding Indigenous Views in the Mining Cycle 5. Indigenous Peoples'
relationships to large-scale mining in post/colonial contexts 6.
Environmental assessment as a knowledge infrastructure 7. Realizing
Indigenous rights: Effective implementation of agreements between
Indigenous Peoples and the extractive industry 8. Comparative perspectives
on the social aspects of mine closure and mine site transition in Canada
and Australia Part 3: Navigating Relationships with Indigenous Communities
9. Understanding the silent dimensions of social acceptability of a lithium
project in the Cree community of Nemaska 10. Lateral violence: Effects of
external pressures on Indigenous communities Part 4: Indigenous Women and
Resource Development 11. Employment trends for Indigenous women working in
the Northern Territory's large-scale mining industry 12. Rhetoric versus
reality: Understanding employment inequities for Inuit women in mining 13.
A mine for women? Trajectories of Kanak women in the nickel industry in New
Caledonia 14. Conclusion Postface: MinErAL Partner Reflections A: How
MinErAL helped expose and share the realities of mining development in the
Nunavik region B: The impact of the MinErAL Project from the perspective of
a Kanak working for Koniambo Nickel
left for Indigenous Peoples' voices in Canadian and Fennoscandian mining
legal frameworks 2. Closure and connection: A Southwest Pacific reappraisal
of the mining enclave 3. Foreign investor accountability for the violation
of Indigenous Peoples' rights in international investment law and
arbitrations 4. Power relationships, institutions, and mining Part 2:
Braiding Indigenous Views in the Mining Cycle 5. Indigenous Peoples'
relationships to large-scale mining in post/colonial contexts 6.
Environmental assessment as a knowledge infrastructure 7. Realizing
Indigenous rights: Effective implementation of agreements between
Indigenous Peoples and the extractive industry 8. Comparative perspectives
on the social aspects of mine closure and mine site transition in Canada
and Australia Part 3: Navigating Relationships with Indigenous Communities
9. Understanding the silent dimensions of social acceptability of a lithium
project in the Cree community of Nemaska 10. Lateral violence: Effects of
external pressures on Indigenous communities Part 4: Indigenous Women and
Resource Development 11. Employment trends for Indigenous women working in
the Northern Territory's large-scale mining industry 12. Rhetoric versus
reality: Understanding employment inequities for Inuit women in mining 13.
A mine for women? Trajectories of Kanak women in the nickel industry in New
Caledonia 14. Conclusion Postface: MinErAL Partner Reflections A: How
MinErAL helped expose and share the realities of mining development in the
Nunavik region B: The impact of the MinErAL Project from the perspective of
a Kanak working for Koniambo Nickel