There are several documented cases of indigenous peoples’ conflicts with mining companies, often for the reason that the land planned for mining is sacred or culturally significant to them. This article presents a comparative analysis of two specific anti-mining social movements in India and the Philippines that combined an emphasis on environmental protection with an emphasis on indigenous cultural rights. We show how the emphasis on indigeneity in these social movements played itself out in relation to globalized frames, as well as the other frames within which the movements were also situated
Since a little over a decade ago, Mining Corp. had come to maintain a challenging role in the presen...
Civil society is not as impotent as argued by many scholars in facing the pervasive force of economi...
Unauthorized mines are not uncommon in mineral-rich regions of poorer countries, and India is no exc...
Support for indigenous peoples has been increasing over the last few decades. This can be seen inter...
Traditional models of transnational advocacy networks (TANs) and stakeholder management do not captu...
With so much academic attention accorded to the features of globalization, it is often uncritically ...
Traditional models of transnational advocacy networks (TANs) and stakeholder management do not captu...
AbstractThe objectives of this research are to study 1) the framing process of the social movements ...
Traditional models of transnational advocacy networks (TANs) and stakeholder management do not captu...
Mineral extraction is growing worldwide, generating serious social and environmental impacts, and in...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/73268/1/ae.2007.34.2.303.pd
In India, as across the world, large-scale mining projects have primarily been located in forest and...
textabstractAbstract. This report aims at exploring contemporary mining conflicts in the context o...
The practices of Canadian mining companies operating in Latin America, and the Canadian government’s...
Summary Social movements have been viewed as vehicles through which the concerns of poor and margina...
Since a little over a decade ago, Mining Corp. had come to maintain a challenging role in the presen...
Civil society is not as impotent as argued by many scholars in facing the pervasive force of economi...
Unauthorized mines are not uncommon in mineral-rich regions of poorer countries, and India is no exc...
Support for indigenous peoples has been increasing over the last few decades. This can be seen inter...
Traditional models of transnational advocacy networks (TANs) and stakeholder management do not captu...
With so much academic attention accorded to the features of globalization, it is often uncritically ...
Traditional models of transnational advocacy networks (TANs) and stakeholder management do not captu...
AbstractThe objectives of this research are to study 1) the framing process of the social movements ...
Traditional models of transnational advocacy networks (TANs) and stakeholder management do not captu...
Mineral extraction is growing worldwide, generating serious social and environmental impacts, and in...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/73268/1/ae.2007.34.2.303.pd
In India, as across the world, large-scale mining projects have primarily been located in forest and...
textabstractAbstract. This report aims at exploring contemporary mining conflicts in the context o...
The practices of Canadian mining companies operating in Latin America, and the Canadian government’s...
Summary Social movements have been viewed as vehicles through which the concerns of poor and margina...
Since a little over a decade ago, Mining Corp. had come to maintain a challenging role in the presen...
Civil society is not as impotent as argued by many scholars in facing the pervasive force of economi...
Unauthorized mines are not uncommon in mineral-rich regions of poorer countries, and India is no exc...