ABSTRACT
This book maps the encounters between Indigenous Peoples and local communities with mining companies in various postcolonial contexts.
Combining comparative and multidisciplinary analysis, the contributors to this volume shine a light on how the mining industry might adapt its practices to the political and legal contexts where they operate. Understanding these processes and how communities respond to these encounters is critical to documenting where and how encounters with mining may benefit or negatively impact Indigenous Peoples. The experiences and reflections shared by Indigenous and non-Indigenous contributors will enhance our understanding of evolving practices and of the different strategies and discourses developed by Indigenous Peoples to deal with mining projects. By mobilizing in-depth fieldwork in five regions—Australia, Canada, Sweden, New Caledonia, and Brazil—this body of work highlights voices often marginalized in mining development studies, including those of Indigenous Peoples and women.
This book will be of great interest to students and scholars of mining and the extractive industries, sustainable development, natural resource management, and Indigenous Peoples.
The Open Access version of this book, available at https://www.taylorfrancis.com, has been made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives (CC-BY-NC-ND) 4.0 license.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|86 pages
Indigenous peoples, law, and politics
chapter 1|19 pages
The space left for Indigenous peoples' voices in Canadian and Fennoscandian mining legal frameworks
chapter 2|29 pages
Closure and connection
chapter 3|20 pages
Foreign investor accountability for the violation of Indigenous peoples' rights in international investment law and arbitrations
chapter 4|16 pages
Power relationships, institutions, and mining
part II|91 pages
Braiding Indigenous views in the mining cycle
chapter 5|28 pages
Indigenous Peoples' relationships to large-scale mining in post/colonial contexts
chapter 6|16 pages
Environmental assessment as a knowledge infrastructure
chapter 7|18 pages
Realizing Indigenous rights
chapter 8|27 pages
Comparative perspectives on the social aspects of mine closure and mine site transition in Canada and Australia
part III|40 pages
Navigating relationships with Indigenous communities
chapter 9|23 pages
Understanding the silent dimensions of social acceptability of a lithium project in the Cree community of Nemaska
part IV|71 pages
Indigenous women and resource development
