Academic literature on the topic 'Canadian mining company'

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Journal articles on the topic "Canadian mining company"

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Green, Heather. "State, company, and community relations at the Polaris mine (Nunavut)." Études/Inuit/Studies 37, no. 2 (2014): 37–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1025709ar.

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Abstract Inuit employment in the mining industry has received very little attention from historians, although mining has been in the Arctic since the 1950s. Using the Polaris mine (1982-2002) on Little Cornwallis Island, Nunavut, as a case study, this article focuses on the Canadian government’s shift away from supporting mining developments in the late 1970s to early 1980s, on Inuit employment in the mining industry, and on the difficulties of Inuit from Resolute Bay in obtaining employment at Polaris. Previous to Polaris, the federal government saw Arctic mines, particularly Rankin Inlet (19
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Martin, Isabelle. "Case against Canadian Mining Company Alleging Use of Forced Labor in Eritrea May Proceed in Canadian Court." International Labor Rights Case Law 6, no. 2 (2020): 191–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/24056901-00602015.

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Deaconu, Adela, and Crina Ioana Filip. "Gold Mining Stakeholders: Diversity and Influence. Roșia Montană Case Study." Journal of East European Management Studies 26, no. 1 (2021): 117–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.5771/0949-6181-2021-1-117.

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Using historiography, online information and the stakeholders’ theory, this study focuses on the interested parties involved in a highly controversial gold mining project in Romania’s Roșia Montană area. The study documents the emergence and influence of different stakeholders (and the relationships between them). The research result suggests that company management and project investors (in this case involving the State as minority owner and regulator and a Canadian company as the majority owner) need to be aware of the objectives of a range of stakeholders including the general public, envir
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Talavera Cano, Andrés. "Bear Creek V. Peru and the Legality of the Investment as a (Implied) Requirement for the Investment Arbitration Tribunal’s Exercise of Jurisdiction." THEMIS Revista de Derecho, no. 77 (December 21, 2020): 447–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.18800/themis.202001.024.

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Concerns about inconsistency in the application of standards in arbitral awards are strongly present in investment treaty arbitration. In particular, tribunals can regularly exercise a varying scope of jurisdiction when they determine the legality requirement that demands foreign investments to be made in accordance with the law of the host state.In this paper, the author seeks to analyze the decision rendered by the tribunal in Bear Creek v. Peru, in which the Canadian mining company alleged that the Peruvian State breach, inter alia, expropriation protections under the Canada-Peru Free Trade
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Gajardo, Anahy. "Between support and marginalization." Abya-yala: Revista sobre Acesso à Justiça e Direitos nas Américas 2, no. 1 (2018): 90–110. http://dx.doi.org/10.26512/abyayala.v2i1.10697.

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Long regarded as an ethnic group extinct since the 16th century, the Diaguita of Chile re-emerged as an indigenous people in the early 2000s in the midst of their struggle against extractivism. Although they did not „exist”Ÿ 15 years ago in legal terms and were socially invisible, they are now the third most important indigenous group in Chile, after the Mapuche and the Aymara. This paper analyses the combined roles of a Canadian mining company (Barrick Gold, Pascua Lama project) and the Chilean state in the process of this group”Ÿs re-emergence in the Huasco Alto region of northern Chile. In
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Ghisler, M. "Review of the Survey's activities in 1993 - new discoveries and perspectives." Rapport Grønlands Geologiske Undersøgelse 160 (January 1, 1994): 8–9. http://dx.doi.org/10.34194/rapggu.v160.8221.

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In general 1993 was a very encouraging year for GGU. The most exciting geological developments were the find of a major zinc deposit in North Greenland by the Canadian company Platinova A/S and the further investigations of the live oil showing discovered in 1992 on Nuussuaq in West Greenland. Both discoveries have contributed to increased interest in exploration for mineral resources by international oil and mining companies in Greenland.
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Annandale, David. "Mining company approaches to environmental approvals regulation: a survey of senior environment managers in Canadian firms." Resources Policy 26, no. 1 (2000): 51–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0301-4207(00)00016-7.

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Chapin, Patrick. "Late-Victorian Gentlemen Entrepreneurs Venturing Into New Worlds of Canadian Business: The Nestegg Mining Company, 1896-981." Journal of the Canadian Historical Association 16, no. 1 (2007): 169–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/015731ar.

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Abstract This case study examines how a group of late nineteenth century Victoria businessmen adjusted to the transition from traditional family capitalism to joint stock company management of a remote speculative mining venture. They encountered numerous unfamiliar obstacles including prejudicial management, the long-distance factor, public investors, and innovations in advertising and financing. Ultimately, Victoria’s unique geography and cultural setting foiled their efforts to establish themselves as Western Canada’s centre of venture capitalism.
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Mouat, Jeremy. "Creating a New Staple: Capital, Technology, and Monopoly in British Columbia’s Resource Sector, 1901-1925." Victoria 1990 1, no. 1 (2006): 215–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/031017ar.

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Abstract This paper examines the mining industry of British Columbia, the province's leading staple during the period when the region was brought within the network of world trade. Specifically, it describes the emergence of zinc production as the most profitable sector of the industry, from the early 1900s through to the mid-1920s. A good deal of importance was attached to discovering some means of treating zinc ore in the early 1900s. Increasing amounts of zinc were being found in the silver-lead ore of eastern British Columbia. Zinc was seen as a contaminant, and smelters penalised mine-own
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Dashwood, Hevina S. "Canadian Mining Companies and Corporate Social Responsibility: Weighing the Impact of Global Norms." Canadian Journal of Political Science 40, no. 1 (2007): 129–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0008423907070047.

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Abstract.This study analyzes the factors that led two Canadian mining companies, Noranda and Placer Dome, to adopt polices on corporate social responsibility (CSR). Although much has been written on CSR in the business and organization fields, there has been little scholarly treatment of the topic from a social sciences perspective. A common assumption is that companies are merelyreactingto societal pressures from transnational non-governmental organizations. This study challenges that assumption, by weighing the impact of emerging global norms of CSR against influences internal to the compani
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Canadian mining company"

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Aubé, David. "Les dynamiques de la résistance écologique : le cas d’une compagnie minière canadienne dans la vallée de Siria au Honduras." Thèse, 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/1866/3519.

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Ce mémoire de maîtrise traite d’un phénomène qui a gagné en importance dans les études sur l’Amérique latine : l’exploitation des ressources naturelles par des compagnies étrangères et l’augmentation des mouvements de résistance des populations locales contre l’implantation de ces compagnies. Délaissant l’accent généralement placé sur la naissance de ces mouvements, les impacts du temps sur les transformations du phénomène de résistance sont mesurés et analysés. Le cas de la compagnie minière canadienne Goldcorp Inc., exploitant de l’or dans la vallée de Siria, au Honduras, illustre à merveill
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de, Oliveira Gustavo. "Explaining mining company and community relations in Paracatu, Brazil: Situational context and company practice." Thesis, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/10214/2435.

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Mineral projects in the global South have been subjected to increasing opposition, especially from adjacent communities, ultimately forcing some firms to abandon government-permitted and financially viable projects. Consequently, the mining literature has become saturated with prescriptions for firms seeking to engage with impacted communities. This literature is limited in that: it has primarily focused on conflict-ridden situations; the role of context has been largely ignored; and there has been little validation of what works and why. This thesis responds to these limitations through an as
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Books on the topic "Canadian mining company"

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Canadian Forty-Mile Gold Dredging Company. A summary report of the Canadian Forty-Mile Gold Dredging Company Limited, incorporated under the Dominion of Canada Companies Act. s.n., 1995.

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Assembly, Canada Legislature Legislative. Bill: An act to incorporate the Leeds Mining and Smelting Company. Hunter, Rose & Lemieux, 2003.

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Assembly, Canada Legislature Legislative. Bill: An act to incorporate the Royal Mining Company of Canada East. Hunter, Rose & Lemieux, 2003.

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Assembly, Canada Legislature Legislative. Bill: An act to incorporate the South Eastern Mining Company of Canada. Thompson, 2003.

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Assembly, Canada Legislature Legislative. Bill: An act to incorporate the South Acton Mining Company of Canada. Hunter, Rose & Lemieux, 2003.

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Assembly, Canada Legislature Legislative. Bill: An act to incorporate the Ramsay Lead Mining and Smelting Company. J. Lovell, 2003.

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Assembly, Canada Legislature Legislative. Bill: An act to incorporate the North Sutton Mining and Smelting Company. Hunter, Rose & Lemieux, 2003.

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Assembly, Canada Legislature Legislative. Bill: An act to incorporate the South Sherbrooke Mining and Smelting Company. Hunter, Rose & Lemieux, 2003.

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Assembly, Canada Legislature Legislative. Bill: An act to amend the act incorporating the Saint Lawrence Mining Company. Thompson, 2003.

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Assembly, Canada Legislature Legislative. Bill: An act respecting mining rights. Thompson, Hunter, 2003.

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Book chapters on the topic "Canadian mining company"

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Langston, Nancy. "Mining Pollution Debates, 1950s Through the 1970s." In Sustaining Lake Superior. Yale University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.12987/yale/9780300212983.003.0005.

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By the late 1950s, the taconite boom that Reserve Mining Company stimulated was having a profound effect on the region’s economy, just as the pulp and paper boom had stimulated the Canadian economy along Lake Superior. Towns thrived; new cars filled the parking lots where well-paid union workers toiled in the taconite facilities. Schools improved, funded by abundant tax receipts. Harms to the lake from the taconite boom were subtle and hard to pin down whereas the benefits were clear to see: jobs for miners and economic development for the region. Throughout the 1950s, as evidence accumulated that taconite was causing pollution problems, state agencies continued to insist that the industry was harmless. Only after scientists found that asbestos had been mobilized from taconite disposal into the drinking water and bodies of urban residents distant from the disposal site did the federal and state governments question the risks from taconite.
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Eklund, Erik. "Creating a Global Industry?" In Global History of Gold Rushes. University of California Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/california/9780520294547.003.0008.

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This chapter, by Erik Eklund, focuses on the gold-mining industry from the middle of the nineteenth century through to the 1930s, with a focus on the role of company formation, working conditions, and state intervention. Utilizing case studies from Canada, South Africa, Ghana, Fiji, and the Australian colony of Victoria, it explores the rise of “industrial mining” over this period. Industrial mining involved larger, more heavily capitalized enterprises, in which workers became wage laborers and owners became shareholders. Industrial mining gendered and racialized the workforce in different ways according to local circumstances, which are explored in each case study. State intervention either underpinned the rise of industrial mining or worked to create uneasy accommodations between industrial work and older traditional patterns of subsistence.
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Pohl, Gayle M. "The Role of Social Media in Enforcing Environmental Justice around the World." In Political Scandal, Corruption, and Legitimacy in the Age of Social Media. IGI Global, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-5225-2019-1.ch006.

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This chapter is a critical analysis of the role that social media plays enforcing environmental justice around the world. It particularly examines how social media has been used internationally to foster Greenpeace International's actions to enforce environmental justice and compliance in three selected countries, namely India, Canada and Russia. The cases examined are a.) the Essar Ltd.'s coal mine project in the Mahan Forests in India; b.) Prirazlomnaya Oil Company's offshore drilling in the Artic Sea, and c.) Resolute Forests Products' mining in the Boreal Forest in Canada. The paper concludes that social media can be used to promote and foster environmental justice globally.
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Partow-Navid, Parviz, and Ludwig Slusky. "IT Security Policy in Public Organizations." In Information Security and Ethics. IGI Global, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-59904-937-3.ch183.

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Today, information security is one of the highest priorities on the IT agenda. In 2003, Luftman and McLean (2004) conducted a survey of Society for Information Management members to identify the top 20 information technology (IT) issues for executives. Security and privacy issues were ranked third, after IT/ business alignment and IT strategic planning. Concept of information security applies to all the data stored in information systems or being communicated in information networks and encompasses measures applied on all layers of open system interconnect (OSI) model of international standards such as application, networking, and physical. Sophisticated technologies and methods have been developed to: • Control access to computer networks • Secure information systems with advanced cryptography and security models • Establish standards for operating systems with focus on confidentiality • Communication integrity and availability for securing different types of networks • Manage trustworthy networks and support business continuity planning, disaster recovery, and auditing The most widely recognized standards are: • In the United States: Trusted Computer System Evaluation Criteria (TCSEC). • In Canada: Canadian Trusted Computer Product Evaluation Criteria (CTCPEC). • In Europe: Information Technology Security Evaluation Criteria (ITSEC). All of theses standards have recently been aggregated into Common Criteria standards. And yet, the information systems continue to be penetrated internally and externally at a high rate by malicious code, attacks leading to loss of processing capability (like distributed denial-of-service attack), impersonation and session hijacking (like man-in-the-middle attack), sniffing, illegal data mining, spying, and others. The problem points to three areas: technology, law, and IT administration. Even prior to the drama of 9/11, several computer laws were enacted in the USA and yet more may come in the future. Still the fundamental threats to information security, whether they originated outside the network or by the company’s insiders, are based on fundamental vulnerabilities inherent to the most common communication protocols, operating systems, hardware, application systems, and operational procedures. Among all technologies, the Internet, which originally was created for communication where trust was not a characteristic, presents the greatest source of vulnerabilities for public information systems infrastructures. Here, a threat is a probable activity, which, if realized, can cause damage to a system or create a loss of confidentiality, integrity, or availability of data. Consequently, vulnerability is a weakness in a system that can be exploited by a threat. Although, some of these attacks may ultimately lead to an organization’s financial disaster, an all-out defense against these threats may not be economically feasible. The defense actions must be focused and measured to correspond to risk assessment analysis provided by the business and IT management. That puts IT management at the helm of the information security strategy in public organizations.
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"Injury to property in the State of Washington by reason of the drifting of fumes from the smelter of the Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company of Canada, in Trail, British Columbia. Report and recommendations of the International Joint Commission established by the Treaty concluded between the United States of America and Canada on 11 January 1909, signed at Toronto on 28 February 1931." In Reports of International Arbitral Awards. UN, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.18356/77fd6aa3-en-fr.

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Conference papers on the topic "Canadian mining company"

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Rietsch, Constant, Catherine Beaudry, and Mikaël Héroux-Vaillancourt. "Validation of a web mining technique to measure innovation in the Canadian nanotechnology-related community." In CARMA 2016 - 1st International Conference on Advanced Research Methods and Analytics. Universitat Politècnica València, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.4995/carma2016.2016.3140.

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In this exploratory study, we explore a methodology using a web mining technique to source data in order to analyse innovation and commercialisation processes in Canadian nanotechnology firms. 79 websites have been extracted and analysed based on keywords related to 4 core concepts (R&D, intellectual property, collaboration and external financing) especially important for the commercialisation of nanotechnology. To validate our methodology, we compare our web mining results with those from a classic questionnaire-based survey. Our results show a correlation between the indicators from
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Heroux-Vaillancourt, Mikael, and Catherine Beaudry. "Validation of innovation indicators from companies’ websites." In CARMA 2018 - 2nd International Conference on Advanced Research Methods and Analytics. Universitat Politècnica València, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.4995/carma2018.2018.8333.

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In this exploratory study, we use a web mining technique to source data in order to create innovation indicators of Canadian nanotechnology and advanced materials firms. 79 websites were extracted and analysed based on keywords related to the concepts of R&D and intellectual property. To understand what our web mining indicators actually measure, we compare them with those from a classic questionnaire-based survey. Formative indices from the surveys variables were built to better represent all the possibilities resulting from the web mining indicators. A MTMM matrix lead us to conclude
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