No Rock Unturned: Revitalizing the Economies of Mining Dependent Communities
May 31 2004
This document, which includes a literature review and bibliography, provides an overview of current research and information on problems faced by mining-dependent communities and the ways and means by which Canadian communities that are dependent on mining have been able to revitalize their economies in the face of industry down-sizing and closure. The scoping exercise serves four key purposes:
- to provide information about dependency and closure that communities need before a mining company moves in;
- to direct communities that already have a mining operation to resources and information to prepare themselves for its closure;
- to provide information and suggest resources to a community that is in crisis because it has been notified that the mine will close; and
- to provide information and suggest resources to communities where the mine is already closed.
| Attachment | ||
|---|---|---|
| No Rock Unturned: Revitalizing the Economies of Mining Dependent Communities | 466.54 KB | |
| No Rock Unturned: Executive Summary (English) | 289.86 KB |
Related Items
- The Boreal Below: Mining Issues and Activities in Canada’s Boreal Forest Region
- "Looking Beneath the Surface" — Report Released on Real Costs of Mining
- Canada's mining industry strikes gold - in the taxpayers' wallet: Federal taxpayers spend $13,000 for each mining job
- On the Ground Research: A Workshop to Identify the Research Needs of Communities Affected by Large-Scale Mining
- Balancing the Books: The Hidden Costs of Mining
- Between a Rock and a Hard Place: Aboriginal Communities and Mining
