Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
985935 Resources Policy 2012 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

This article critically examines the nature and quality of governance in community representation and civil society engagement in the context of trans-national large-scale mining, drawing on experiences in the Anosy Region of south-east Madagascar. An exploration of functional relationships between government, mining business and civil society stakeholders reveals an equivocal legitimacy of certain civil society representatives, created by state manipulation, which contributes to community disempowerment. The appointment of local government officials, rather than election, creates a hierarchy of upward dependencies and a culture where the majority of officials express similar views and political alliances. As a consequence, community resistance is suppressed.Voluntary mechanisms such as Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) and the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI) advocate community stakeholder engagement in decision making processes as a measure to achieve public accountability. In many developing countries, where there is a lack of transparency and high levels of corruption, the value of this engagement, however, is debatable. Findings from this study indicate that the power relationships which exist between stakeholders in the highly lucrative mining industry override efforts to achieve "good governance" through voluntary community engagement. The continuing challenge lies in identifying where the responsibility sits in order to address this power struggle to achieve fair representation.

Research highlights► We explore stakeholder relationships in a large-scale mining project in SE Madagascar. ► We examine the impacts of power hierarchies on representation and decision-making. ► Poor governance creates dependencies that override fair community representation. ► Stakeholder engagement focus in governance initiatives overlooks complex dependencies. ► Voluntary initiatives fail to facilitate good governance in the extractive industries.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Economic Geology
Authors
, , ,