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Social terrains of mine closure in the Philippines / Minerva Chaloping-March.

By: Material type: TextSeries: Routledge studies of the extractive industries and sustainable developmentPublisher: New York : Routledge, 2018Edition: First EditionDescription: 1 online resourceISBN:
  • 9781315177182
  • 9781351709576
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Print version: : No titleDDC classification:
  • 338.209599 C439
LOC classification:
  • HD9506.P52 C43 2018
Online resources:
Contents:
Mine closure : anticipating the end before the beginning -- The socio : political landscape of mining in the Philippines -- Pre-closure challenges at the Padcal mine -- Company relations with communities around the Padcal mine -- Antamok: launchpad of industrial mining in the Philippines -- Change and continuity in Acupan-Balatoc -- Drawing lessons from Itogon and Tuba for mine closure challenges.
Summary: "The current discourse on mine closure is informed predominantly by industry and corporate perspectives and predicated by experiences of mainly mining companies that are based in developed countries where necessary planning frameworks and regulatory requirements are well-established. Mine closure planning, well promoted and accepted as good business practice in the global minerals industry, has been primarily technical and precautionary both in approach and focus. Planning modelling and monitoring strategies incorporate as comprehensive and minutiae elements as possible such as properties inherent in landforms, climate, geology, flora and fauna, among others. However, locality-based concerns that revolve around resource access and tenure, rights and entitlements tied to locality and indigeneity, labour recruitment, and other non-bio-physical elements are hardly examined. Any mine closure program that omits these elements is deficient and therefore ineffective.Social Terrains of Mine Closure in the Philippines, based on ethnographic research and archival materials, presents the varying experiences of three mines to demonstrate that the mine closure process is an intense locus for competition and compromises among various social actors.This book offers key messages for understanding the complex socio-economic, political, and business realities that make up the social terrains of mine closure, and will be of great interest to students and researchers in development studies, community development, business studies, anthropology, and sociology. It will also appeal to those working in the global minerals sectors and NGOs that engage in development work and advocacy for responsible mining."--Provided by publisher.
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Mine closure : anticipating the end before the beginning -- The socio : political landscape of mining in the Philippines -- Pre-closure challenges at the Padcal mine -- Company relations with communities around the Padcal mine -- Antamok: launchpad of industrial mining in the Philippines -- Change and continuity in Acupan-Balatoc -- Drawing lessons from Itogon and Tuba for mine closure challenges.

"The current discourse on mine closure is informed predominantly by industry and corporate perspectives and predicated by experiences of mainly mining companies that are based in developed countries where necessary planning frameworks and regulatory requirements are well-established. Mine closure planning, well promoted and accepted as good business practice in the global minerals industry, has been primarily technical and precautionary both in approach and focus. Planning modelling and monitoring strategies incorporate as comprehensive and minutiae elements as possible such as properties inherent in landforms, climate, geology, flora and fauna, among others. However, locality-based concerns that revolve around resource access and tenure, rights and entitlements tied to locality and indigeneity, labour recruitment, and other non-bio-physical elements are hardly examined. Any mine closure program that omits these elements is deficient and therefore ineffective.Social Terrains of Mine Closure in the Philippines, based on ethnographic research and archival materials, presents the varying experiences of three mines to demonstrate that the mine closure process is an intense locus for competition and compromises among various social actors.This book offers key messages for understanding the complex socio-economic, political, and business realities that make up the social terrains of mine closure, and will be of great interest to students and researchers in development studies, community development, business studies, anthropology, and sociology. It will also appeal to those working in the global minerals sectors and NGOs that engage in development work and advocacy for responsible mining."--Provided by publisher.

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