The governance of mining and the human security of local community: a case study of the Indonesian coal mining industryTools Indriastuti, Suyani (2019) The governance of mining and the human security of local community: a case study of the Indonesian coal mining industry. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham.
AbstractThis thesis explores the ‘disruption’ of human security of local communities by the Indonesian coal mining industry at the level of the individual and also at the aggregate level of the ‘community’. Human security refers to freedom from want (poverty and unemployment), fear (violence and conflict), and indignity (displacement and human rights abuse). As a result of poor mining practices such as land grabbing, deforestation, unmaintained mining pits and waste local communities encounter social and environmental problems. I argue that the principle of commodification, as outlined in Karl Polanyi’s book The Great Transformation, dictates how the mining industry governs the use of land and labour. I also examine counter-movements, including action by local communities, civil society organisations (CSOs) and the state, that aim to ‘decommodify’ land and labour and protect local communities from the detrimental impacts of mining.
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