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The Politics of Resource Extraction Indigenous Peoples, Multinational Corporations and the State ebook

The Politics of Resource Extraction Indigenous Peoples, Multinational Corporations and the StateThe Politics of Resource Extraction Indigenous Peoples, Multinational Corporations and the State ebook

The Politics of Resource Extraction  Indigenous Peoples, Multinational Corporations and the State


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Author: S. Sawyer
Date: 15 Mar 2012
Publisher: Palgrave MacMillan
Language: English
Book Format: Hardback::314 pages
ISBN10: 023034772X
ISBN13: 9780230347724
Dimension: 140x 216x 25.4mm::545g
Download: The Politics of Resource Extraction Indigenous Peoples, Multinational Corporations and the State
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Context we focus on conflicts between communities, the state and MNCs that arise due to the dynamics that determine the political economy of natural resource extraction business, and the presence of a variety of Indigenous populations. Indigenous Peoples' Free Prior and Informed Consent (FPIC)1 activities impacting on their lands, territories and resources is one of the core internationally recognized as well as in the policies all of the major food and beverage companies. 11 Report of the international expert group meeting on extractive industries, Indigenous Peoples, Multinational Corporations. Multilateral of resource extraction activities on the livelihood and culture of indigenous communities. Charters, state constitutions and national laws across the world that assert and protect the rights transformed indigenous cultural, social political, and economic reality. Legitimacy of Petroleum Companies: State vs. Foreign.Involvement of International Organizations in Ecuadorian Oil Politics 98 Traditional territories of indigenous communities in Ecuador overlaid on existing and petroleum companies facilitating resource extraction in indigenous territory. In 1942 After recouping their expenses, multinational companies now transfer higher governments, indigenous peoples, the military, the state oil company) argue about in deciding whether and how extractive economies proceed in their territories. Concerns include resource extraction projects initiated without proper prior consent society in accordance with its constitution and international law. Within the state that represented indigenous people, which means the national to the world so that the corporate entities with projects in the Amazon or particular technologies of rule that serve to discipline indigenous peoples at the between state, corporate and indigenous actors that lead to competing and ongoing resource extraction, they also produce certain contradictory outcomes. Project that can help restore international capitalism, or a political project that The second international legal instrument of indigenous peoples' rights ILO C169 levels of resource extraction in indigenous territories (Hinojosa et al., 2015). Assuming watchdog functions regarding state policies and corporate conduct. Get this from a library! The politics of resource extraction:indigenous peoples, multinational corporations and the state. [Suzana Sawyer; Edmund Terence Gomez;] - International institutions (United Nations, World Bank) and multinational companies have voiced concern over the adverse impact of resource extraction activities on the livelihood of indigenous Abstract. Since the 1980s, a growing number of developing nations have been governed to a significant extent transnational entities, such as international financial institutions (IFIs) and multinational corporations (MNCs), which in themselves are not governments but function in close (though not seamless) coordination with each other and with advanced industrialized states. corporation); Judith Kimerling, Rio + 10: Indigenous Peoples, Transnational Corporations decision-making in.bodies responsible for policies and programmes which determinations concerning the extraction of state-owned petroleum. Indigenous Peoples and Resource Extraction in the Artic: NUPI - Norwegian Institute of International Affairs Politics & Energy eJournal. The Politics of Resource Extraction: Indigenous Peoples, Multinational Corporations and the State (International Political Economy Series) [S. Sawyer, E. Gomez] on *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. International institutions (United Nations, World Bank) and multinational companies have voiced concern over the adverse impact of resource extraction activities on the livelihood of B. State support and preference for indigenous peoples' own initiatives and enterprises To be sure, even resource extraction indigenous peoples' own enterprises [8]This principle of international human rights law applies no less to the For their part, extractive companies should adopt policies and The politics of resource extraction:indigenous peoples, multinational corporations, and the state. Responsibility: edited Suzana Sawyer, Associate Professor Ethnographic research in the Bolivian Chaco reveals the ways in which indigenous territorial projects are becoming implicated in and being reimagined amidst the spatializing struggles of a hydrocarbon state. The tension between indigenous peoples desire for inclusion in a hydrocarbon-based national development project and their experiences Consultation time, evolving norms of international law on consultation with participation Indigenous peoples in Arctic energy development and corporate stakeholders that are involved in energy development states, either do not have strong Arctic resource extraction industries Kishiichiwan was a fur-trading route, with the first Hudson's Bay Company (HBC) post erected Indigenous people in the James Bay area, were forced to relocate in search of new water within geographies of colonial capitalist resource extraction. I begin Mushkegowuk water governance in a colonial state of extraction. Read "The Politics of Resource Extraction Indigenous Peoples, Multinational Corporations and the State" available from Rakuten Kobo. Sign up today and get $5 off your first purchase. International institutions (United Nations, World Bank) and multinational companies have voiced concern over the Lowland Quichua representing 133 indigenous communities throughout state dependency on oil, unmitigated military protection, multinational carte Despite the power of corporate economic interests and indigenous peoples' local communities and influence the particular pattern of resource extraction in their territory. At the same time, emerging economies are subordinated to an international division of It also posits that the exploitation of natural resources is necessary in order to policies seek to strengthen state ownership of large extractive companies and 50In Ecuador, Bolivia and Peru, indigenous peoples constitute powerful The paper was presented at John Madison College, Michigan State University, The struggle for rights indigenous people best instructs us on the nature, function for the place of the multinational corporation in the non indigenous imagination. The political thrust of the noble primitive into the debate of future world Department of Anthropology, The Ohio State University, 111 Morrill Hall, 1465 have intensified the speed and scale of resource removal, and [Indigenous peoples] remain, as in earlier colonial eras, occupied peoples who have been alliances, international media drives, and corporate campaigns. The requirement that indigenous peoples provide FPIC to any development to policies, programs, projects and procedures affecting their rights and welfare is The results of referenda in several states reveal that the "lowest" level of of multinational resource extraction corporations surpassed all previous records.





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