Social, Environmental and Economic Sustainability in the Context of Melanesian Mining Projects

Social, Environmental and Economic Sustainability in the Context of Melanesian Mining Projects

“This is an interdisciplinary study of Melanesian understandings of socio-economic and environmental sustainability in the context of mining projects. It entails research into traditional ecological knowledge and assessment of ways that local understandings and expectations compromise programs based on Western scientific principles. It will examine local ideas about land use and food security, and the social and cultural factors that determine responses to impacts of mining projects. The project will involve collaborative, interdisciplinary research, integrating social and cultural analysis and environmental and agrarian studies. It will contribute to current debates on environmentalism, mining impact and sustainable development.”

Researcher(s)
Martha Macintyre Simon Foale
Institution(s)
University of Melbourne James Cook University (JCU) Australia
City
Lihir Island
Country
Papua New Guinea
Keywords
project
Publications

Filer, Colin, and Martha Macintyre. 2006. “Grass Roots and Deep Holes: Community Responses to Mining in Melanesia.” The Contemporary Pacific 18 (2): 215–231.

Macintyre, Martha, and Simon Foale. 2013. “Science, Traditional Ecological Knowledge, and Anthropology: Managing the Impacts of Mining in Papua New Guinea.” Collaborative Anthropologies 6: 399–418.

Terralingua. 2015. “Mining and Cultural Loss: Assessing and Mitigating Impacts in Papua New Guinea.” July 5, 2015. https://terralingua.org/stories/mining-and-cultural-loss-papua-new-guinea/.

Website(s)