International Development Research Centre (IDRC) Canada     
Web Archives > Publications > IDRC Books > All our books > MINING AND THE ENVIRONMENT
 Topic Explorer  
IDRC Books
     New
     in_focus
     Development & evaluation
     Economics
     Environment & biodiversity
     Food/agriculture
     Health
     IT/communication
     Natural resources
     Science/technology
     Social/political sciences
    All our books

IDRC's 40th anniversary

Subscribe

Free Online Books

Free Online Books
 People
Bill Carman

ID: 9341
Added: 2002-09-09 15:47
Modified: 2009-02-05 12:45
Refreshed: 2012-02-10 18:16

Click here to get the URL for the RSS format file RSS format file

MINING AND THE ENVIRONMENT
Case Studies from the Americas
Prev Book(s) 204 of 271 Next

ACFFBEB.jpg MINING AND THE ENVIRONMENT
Case Studies from the Americas

Edited by Alyson Warhurst

IDRC 1998
ISBN Out of print
e-ISBN 1-5-5250-303-8
300 pp.

 Browse from this page Download e-book

The legacy of the mining industry is destruction of land and pollution of air and water. Conventional wisdom also suggests that international mining firms will locate where environmental legislation is most lax. However, this picture — of mining firms operating with little regard for nature or local populations — is no longer accurate. Protection of the environment, of mine workers, and of nearby communities has become nearly as much a concern as putting "rock in the box."

Mining and the Environment shows how mining firms that are the most efficient in extracting minerals are also better at protecting the environment. The book presents case studies from Chile, Peru, Brazil, Bolivia, and the United States, and provides an excellent overview of the interactions between environmental regulation, innovation, and sustainable development. It shows that the environmental performance of mining firms is not entirely dependent on government legislation.

Corporate attitudes are changing, government policies are changing, civil society is changing, and the business environment is changing. Mining and the Environment examines these changes and what they mean for the future of the mining industry and the well-being of our environment.

THE EDITOR

Alyson Warhurst is Professor of Environmental Strategy at the School of Management, University of Bath, Director of the International Centre for the Environment (ICE), and Director of the international Mining and Environment Research Network (MERN).

Prev Book(s) 204 of 271 Next

 Document(s)

Foreword — David Brooks 1998


Acknowledgments 1998


Introduction. MERN: Toward an Analysis of the Public Policy–Corporate Strategy Interface — Alyson Warhurst 1998


Chapter 1. Environmental Regulation, Innovation, and Sustainable Development — Alyson Warhurst 1998


Chapter 2. US Environmental Regulations and the Mining Industry: Lessons for Chile — Juanita Gana 1998


Chapter 3. Environmental Policies and Practices in Chilean Mining — Gustavo Lagos and Patricio Velasco 1998


Chapter 4. Environmental Management in a Heterogeneous Mining Industry: The Case of Peru — Alfredo Núñez-Barriga, assisted by Isabel Castañeda-Hurtado 1998


Chapter 5. Formal and Garimpo Mining and the Environment in Brazil — Maria Hanai 1998


Chapter 6. Environmental Issues in Brazilian Tin Production — Teresinha Andrade 1998


Chapter 7. Environmental Management in the Bauxite, Alumina, and Aluminum Industry in Brazil — Liliana Acero 1998


Chapter 8. Competitiveness, Environmental Performance, and Technical Change: A Case Study of the Bolivian Mining Industry — Ismael Fernando Loayza 1998


Appendix 1. Contributors 1998


Appendix 2. Acronyms and Abbreviations 1998


Bibliography 1998




   guest (Read)(Ottawa)   Login Home|Careers|Copyright and Terms of Use|General Infomation|Contact Us|Low bandwidth