nr |
titel |
auteur |
tijdschrift |
jaar |
jaarg. |
afl. |
pagina('s) |
type |
1 |
‘A concealed economy’: Artisanal diamond mining in Butha-Buthe district, Lesotho
|
Makhetha, Esther |
|
|
7 |
3 |
p. 975-981 |
artikel |
2 |
Activists and regulatory politics: Institutional opportunities, information, and the activation of environmental regulation
|
Haslam, Paul Alexander |
|
|
7 |
3 |
p. 1077-1085 |
artikel |
3 |
An assessment of the media's portrayal of murders at Chinese mines
|
Yang, Xiuyun |
|
|
7 |
3 |
p. 1066-1076 |
artikel |
4 |
Anticipating futures through enactments of expertise: A case study of an environmental controversy in a coal mining region of Colombia
|
Carmona, Susana |
|
|
7 |
3 |
p. 1086-1095 |
artikel |
5 |
A review of the failed attempts to curb mercury use at artisanal gold mines and a proposed solution
|
Veiga, Marcello M. |
|
|
7 |
3 |
p. 1135-1146 |
artikel |
6 |
Beneath the surface: Capital-labor relations, housing and the making of the Bakken boom
|
Chambers, Chad |
|
|
7 |
3 |
p. 908-917 |
artikel |
7 |
Beyond transparency: A consideration of extraction's full costs
|
Zalik, Anna |
|
|
7 |
3 |
p. 781-785 |
artikel |
8 |
Concerning environmental audits in the Nigeria Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative
|
Bassey, Nnimmo |
|
|
7 |
3 |
p. 786-789 |
artikel |
9 |
Consistently unreliable: Oil spill data and transparency discourse
|
Watts, Michael |
|
|
7 |
3 |
p. 790-795 |
artikel |
10 |
Constructing a crisis: The effect of resource curse discourse on extractive governance in Ghana
|
Johnson, McKenzie F. |
|
|
7 |
3 |
p. 965-974 |
artikel |
11 |
Cooptation and contention: Public participation in the Nigeria Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative and the demand for accountable government
|
Osuoka, Isaac ‘Asume’ |
|
|
7 |
3 |
p. 796-803 |
artikel |
12 |
Corporate affairs and the conquest of social performance in mining
|
Kemp, Deanna |
|
|
7 |
3 |
p. 835-837 |
artikel |
13 |
Corporate Social Responsibility and Canada's Role in Africa's Extractive Sectors edited by Nathan Andrews, J. Andrew Grant, Toronto, Canada: University of Toronto Press. 2020 Xix + 296 CN $36.95 (paperback) ISBN 9781487522452
|
Graham, Emmanuel |
|
|
7 |
3 |
p. 1158-1159 |
artikel |
14 |
Corruption and the circumvention of financial sanctions via the extractive industries in Dubai
|
Teichmann, Fabian |
|
|
7 |
3 |
p. 1022-1028 |
artikel |
15 |
COVID-19, extractive industries, and indigenous communities in Canada: Notes towards a political economy research agenda
|
Bernauer, Warren |
|
|
7 |
3 |
p. 844-846 |
artikel |
16 |
Ecological civilization, authoritarian environmentalism, and the eco-politics of extractive governance in China
|
Lo, Kevin |
|
|
7 |
3 |
p. 1029-1035 |
artikel |
17 |
Editorial Board
|
|
|
|
7 |
3 |
p. ii |
artikel |
18 |
Enhancing corporate standing, shifting blame: An examination of Canada's Extractive Sector Transparency Measures Act
|
Ciupa, Kristin |
|
|
7 |
3 |
p. 826-834 |
artikel |
19 |
Estimating scales of gold ore production and processing in Zaruma and La Merced de Buenos Aires, Ecuador: Electrical power consumption as an indirect metric
|
Gaudry, Karl-Heinz |
|
|
7 |
3 |
p. 847-854 |
artikel |
20 |
Extractive practices, oil corporations and contested spaces in Nigeria
|
Adunbi, Omolade |
|
|
7 |
3 |
p. 804-811 |
artikel |
21 |
First nations rights and colonising practices by the nuclear industry: An Australian battleground for environmental justice
|
Marsh, Jillian K. |
|
|
7 |
3 |
p. 870-881 |
artikel |
22 |
From coal not to ashes but to what? As Pontes, social memory and the concentration problem
|
Perez-Sindin, Xaquin |
|
|
7 |
3 |
p. 882-891 |
artikel |
23 |
From rules to standards: Civil society contestations, EITI and the missing link to accountability in Nigeria: Interview with Faith Nwadishi
|
Osuoka, Isaac ‘Asume’ |
|
|
7 |
3 |
p. 820-825 |
artikel |
24 |
From the postwar era to intensified Chinese intervention: Variegated extractive regimes in the Philippines and Indonesia
|
Camba, Alvin |
|
|
7 |
3 |
p. 1054-1065 |
artikel |
25 |
Guiding corporate social responsibility practice for social license to operate: A Nordic mining perspective
|
Lindman, Åsa |
|
|
7 |
3 |
p. 892-907 |
artikel |
26 |
Guyana: Border Disputes, Politics and Oil, N. Khublall. Independently published (2020). 338pp., ISBN 979-8647920829.
|
Fenton Villar, Paul |
|
|
7 |
3 |
p. 1160-1161 |
artikel |
27 |
Industrial policies of countries with abundant natural resources in the Association of Southeast Asian Nations and Pacific Alliance
|
Landa-Arroyo, Yuri |
|
|
7 |
3 |
p. 1046-1053 |
artikel |
28 |
“In my village, everyone uses the tractor”: Gold mining, agriculture and social transformation in rural Burkina Faso
|
Brugger, Fritz |
|
|
7 |
3 |
p. 940-953 |
artikel |
29 |
Invisibility and the extractive-pandemic nexus
|
Bainton, Nicholas |
|
|
7 |
3 |
p. 841-843 |
artikel |
30 |
Licensing acceptance in a mineral-rich welfare state: Critical reflections on the social license to operate in Sweden
|
Poelzer, Gregory |
|
|
7 |
3 |
p. 1096-1107 |
artikel |
31 |
Local perspectives on food security in Nigeria's Niger delta
|
Babatunde, Abosede Omowumi |
|
|
7 |
3 |
p. 931-939 |
artikel |
32 |
Mapping and classification of mining host communities: A case study of South Africa
|
Cole, Megan J. |
|
|
7 |
3 |
p. 954-964 |
artikel |
33 |
Mining heterogeneity: Diverse labor arrangements in an Indonesian informal gold economy
|
Libassi, Matthew |
|
|
7 |
3 |
p. 1036-1045 |
artikel |
34 |
Mining institutions, contention and credibility: Applying the Conflict Analysis Model to court cases in China
|
Yang, Xiuyun |
|
|
7 |
3 |
p. 1011-1021 |
artikel |
35 |
Mobility, temporary migration and changing livelihoods in Zimbabwe's artisanal mining sector
|
Mkodzongi, Grasian |
|
|
7 |
3 |
p. 994-1001 |
artikel |
36 |
Natural gas pipeline compressor stations: VOC emissions and mortality rates
|
Hendryx, Michael |
|
|
7 |
3 |
p. 864-869 |
artikel |
37 |
Poisoned chalice or opportunity for positive impact? an analysis of the impact of ‘inherited’ corporate social responsibility (CSR) commitments in Kenya's titanium mining industry✰
|
Abuya, Willice O. |
|
|
7 |
3 |
p. 1002-1010 |
artikel |
38 |
Regulatory framework and natural gas activities: A curse or boon to host communities in Southern Tanzania?
|
Nuhu, Said |
|
|
7 |
3 |
p. 982-993 |
artikel |
39 |
Running out? Rethinking resource depletion
|
Kirsch, Stuart |
|
|
7 |
3 |
p. 838-840 |
artikel |
40 |
Serious games as a social learning tool in formalizing the artisanal and small-scale mining sector in African territories
|
Andriamasinoro, Fenintsoa |
|
|
7 |
3 |
p. 1108-1120 |
artikel |
41 |
Shale gas development and crime: A review of the literature
|
Stretesky, Paul |
|
|
7 |
3 |
p. 1147-1157 |
artikel |
42 |
The end of mining labor struggles? The changing dynamics of labor in Latin America
|
Manky, Omar |
|
|
7 |
3 |
p. 1121-1127 |
artikel |
43 |
The global iron ore market: From cyclical developments to potential structural changes
|
Jégourel, Yves |
|
|
7 |
3 |
p. 1128-1134 |
artikel |
44 |
The politics of natural resource investments and rights in Africa: A theoretical approach
|
Buur, Lars |
|
|
7 |
3 |
p. 918-930 |
artikel |
45 |
The role of justice in developing critical minerals
|
Heffron, Raphael J |
|
|
7 |
3 |
p. 855-863 |
artikel |
46 |
Towards a more accountable resource governance in developing countries: The case of Ghana’s oil and gas sector
|
Akonnor, Augustina |
|
|
7 |
3 |
p. 812-819 |
artikel |