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The social license The story of the san cristobal mine

By: Robert G. BoutilierContributor(s): Lan ThomsonLanguage: Англи Original language: UK Publication details: London Greenleaf publishing 2019Description: 177хуудас A5Content type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 978-1-138-57968-2Subject(s): social | The social license | license | boutilier | thomsonDDC classification: 658 4
Contents:
In the Beginning
The historical roots of divergent views of fairness
Bolivian politics from the spanish to the neo-liberals
Retrospective from discovery to operating mine
Stakeholder strategies from quantitative measures
Distinctive features and conclusions
Summary: This unique book combines a colourful history of Bolivian politics with some of the most advanced quantitative techniques yet developed for socio-political risk analysis. This is the story of how a foreign-owned private sector mining company (Minera San Cristobal - MSC) earned, lost, and regained its social licence to operate. Robert G. Boutilier and Ian Thomson, leading experts in stakeholder management theory and practice, transform the concept of the SLO from a metaphor to a management tool. The book traces the development of new concepts and measures in the field of stakeholder engagement while following the narrative of a community struggling with a fundamental change in its identity from a declining, malnourished llama-herding village to one of the richest towns in Bolivia. This remarkable story will inspire practitioners in the field of stakeholder management; it will provide an invaluable roadmap for professionals working on land re-use projects in the energy, mining, and conservation sectors; it will make stakeholder relations concepts and techniques accessible to students through an engaging and in-depth case study; and it will open your eyes to one of the most fascinating accounts of how two different cultures collided and then came together to address different but aligned goals.
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Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Ном, сурах бичиг Ном, сурах бичиг Удирдлагын академи
Фонд
658 4 T44 (Browse shelf (Opens below)) 6075 Available E6075
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In the Beginning

The historical roots of divergent views of fairness

Bolivian politics from the spanish to the neo-liberals

Retrospective from discovery to operating mine

Stakeholder strategies from quantitative measures

Distinctive features and conclusions

This unique book combines a colourful history of Bolivian politics with some of the most advanced quantitative techniques yet developed for socio-political risk analysis. This is the story of how a foreign-owned private sector mining company (Minera San Cristobal - MSC) earned, lost, and regained its social licence to operate. Robert G. Boutilier and Ian Thomson, leading experts in stakeholder management theory and practice, transform the concept of the SLO from a metaphor to a management tool. The book traces the development of new concepts and measures in the field of stakeholder engagement while following the narrative of a community struggling with a fundamental change in its identity from a declining, malnourished llama-herding village to one of the richest towns in Bolivia.

This remarkable story will inspire practitioners in the field of stakeholder management; it will provide an invaluable roadmap for professionals working on land re-use projects in the energy, mining, and conservation sectors; it will make stakeholder relations concepts and techniques accessible to students through an engaging and in-depth case study; and it will open your eyes to one of the most fascinating accounts of how two different cultures collided and then came together to address different but aligned goals.

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