Extractive industries can provide great opportunities for post-conflict peacebuilding in resourcerich countries by providing revenue to finance reconstruction and set the economy back on track. However, the process of resource extraction often poses challenges for peacebuilding. This article first explains the various challenges that valuable natural resources can pose in post-conflict countries, and establishes a typology of post-conflict contexts where extractive industries, the host country, and the international community can play primary roles as peace promoters. It then elaborates on the specific roles each of these actors can play: i) what approaches are available for responsible companies that aim to be peace sensitive and even prom...
Natural resources are strongly connected to the onset, duration and recurrence of armed conflicts. H...
Despite the apparent decline in the global incidence of major armed conflict, there remain many coun...
Violent conflict can be catastrophic for developing countries and their neighbours, stunting and eve...
Peacemaking and the Extractive Industries addresses a significant gap in research on the political a...
This paper discusses the relevance and utility of the existing literature on business and peace for ...
Much attention has been paid to the role of high-value natural resources—timber, diamonds, oil, gas,...
The need to build legitimate and capable states in wartorn societies is now widely recognized. The P...
This paper discusses the relevance and utility of the existing literature on business and peace for ...
In a world struggling to adapt to seismic social and environmental changes, the time is now for busi...
In a world struggling to adapt to seismic social and environmental changes, the time is now for busi...
When natural resource revenues provide an important motive and/or means for armed conflict, the tran...
We build a theoretical framework that allows for endogenous conflict behaviour (i.e., fighting effor...
Abstract : African countries endowed with natural resources, especially oil have seen violent confl...
The role of international companies in post-conflict reconstruction is an essential complement to th...
An abundance of natural resources in a country is conducive to its development. Nevertheless, the ...
Natural resources are strongly connected to the onset, duration and recurrence of armed conflicts. H...
Despite the apparent decline in the global incidence of major armed conflict, there remain many coun...
Violent conflict can be catastrophic for developing countries and their neighbours, stunting and eve...
Peacemaking and the Extractive Industries addresses a significant gap in research on the political a...
This paper discusses the relevance and utility of the existing literature on business and peace for ...
Much attention has been paid to the role of high-value natural resources—timber, diamonds, oil, gas,...
The need to build legitimate and capable states in wartorn societies is now widely recognized. The P...
This paper discusses the relevance and utility of the existing literature on business and peace for ...
In a world struggling to adapt to seismic social and environmental changes, the time is now for busi...
In a world struggling to adapt to seismic social and environmental changes, the time is now for busi...
When natural resource revenues provide an important motive and/or means for armed conflict, the tran...
We build a theoretical framework that allows for endogenous conflict behaviour (i.e., fighting effor...
Abstract : African countries endowed with natural resources, especially oil have seen violent confl...
The role of international companies in post-conflict reconstruction is an essential complement to th...
An abundance of natural resources in a country is conducive to its development. Nevertheless, the ...
Natural resources are strongly connected to the onset, duration and recurrence of armed conflicts. H...
Despite the apparent decline in the global incidence of major armed conflict, there remain many coun...
Violent conflict can be catastrophic for developing countries and their neighbours, stunting and eve...