ABSTRACT

How are indigenous and local people faring in their dealings with mining and related industries in the first part of the 21st century? The unifying experience in all the resource-rich states covered in the book is the social and economic disadvantage experienced by indigenous peoples and local communities, paradoxically surrounded by wealth-producing projects. Another critical commonality is the role of law. Where the imposition of statutory regulation is likely to result in conflict with local people, some large modern corporations have shown a preference for alternatives to repressive measures and expensive litigation. Ensuring that local people benefit economically is now a core goal for those companies that seek a social licence to operate to secure these resources. There is almost universal agreement that the best use of the financial and other benefits that flow to indigenous and local people from these projects is investment in the economic participation, education and health of present generations and accumulation of wealth for future generations. There is much hanging on the success of these strategies: it is often asserted that they will result in dramatic improvements in the status of indigenous and local communities. What happens in practice is fascinating, as the contributors to this book explain in case studies and analysis of legal and economic problems and solutions.

chapter |19 pages

Introduction

part I|87 pages

Impacts, strategies and choices

chapter 1|22 pages

The resource curse compared

Australian Aboriginal participation in the resource extraction industry and distribution of impacts 1

chapter 2|14 pages

Curse or opportunity?

Mineral revenues, rent seeking and development in Aboriginal Australia

chapter 3|17 pages

Measuring indigenous outcomes from mining agreements in Australia

The role of applied demography

chapter 4|18 pages

Papua New Guinea

Conflicts, customary landholding and resource exploitation

chapter 5|13 pages

Mining companies as agents for social development

The case for more effectual corporate–community investments 1

part II|101 pages

Agreements, taxation and natural wealth accounts

chapter 8|15 pages

The development forum in Papua New Guinea

Evaluating outcomes for local communities

part III|73 pages

Economic development for local and indigenous people

chapter 12|17 pages

Turning a benefit agreement into practical development

A case study of a Papua New Guinea development foundation 1

chapter 13|20 pages

From paternalism to partnership

The Good Neighbour Agreement and the Argyle Diamond Mine Indigenous Land Use Agreement in Western Australia

chapter 15|15 pages

To be destitute or to benefit

Corporate social responsibility and mining in South Africa 1