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Description
The world of international mining is changing rapidly. Mining corporations are encroaching on more and more greenfield sites in Africa, the Asia-Pacific and Latin America, to serve ever-expanding global industries.
Moody shows that large-scale mining imposes a heavy toll on local communities, on their fragile economies and ways of life, as well as the environment. He challenges the mining corporations' recent public relations offensive extolling the virtues of largescale mining and its alleged compatibility with sustainable development, and reveals the unprecedented wave of community and trade union opposition to projects in both the South and the North.
This important book concludes with urgent proposals to check the role of multinationals in a sector that has always been at the core of resource exploitation.
Table of Contents
2. How the World Bank backs bad miners
3. Cursed by resources
4. Blood, toil and tears
5. The destruction of construction
6. Sacrifice areas
7. Winning hearts and mines
8. No means no
Product details
Published | 29 Feb 2008 |
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Format | Ebook (PDF) |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 225 |
ISBN | 9781848131682 |
Imprint | Zed Books |
Series | Global Issues |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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Rocks and Hard Places brings to the surface the disparities of economy, and the resilience and tenacity of indigenous communities, in the face of generation after generation of exploitation. It makes us deeply aware of the cycles of colonialism which continue to lie at the heart of the global mining industry.
Winona LaDuke, Indigenous Womens Network

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