
AJUNTAMENT D'ALCOI
Website

Generalitat Valenciana
Website

Ayuntamiento de Valencia
Website

Cicloplast
Website

Ayuntamiento de Onil
Website

Anarpla
Website

Ayuntamiento de Mislata
Website

nlWA, North London Waste Authority
Website

Ayuntamiento de Salinas
Website

Zicla
Website

Fondazione Ecosistemi
Website

PEFC
Website

ALQUIENVAS
Website

DIPUTACI� DE VAL�NCIA
Website

AYUNTAMIENTO DE REQUENA
Website

UNIVERSIDAD DE ZARAGOZA
Website

OBSERVATORIO CONTRATACIÓN PÚBLICA
Website

AYUNTAMIENTO DE PAIPORTA
Website

AYUNTAMIENTO DE CUENCA
Website

BERL� S.A.
Website

CM PLASTIK
Website

TRANSFORMADORES INDUSTRIALES ECOL�GICOS

INDUSTRIAS AGAPITO
Website

RUBI KANGURO
Website
If you want to support our LIFE project as a STAKEHOLDER, please contact with us: life-future-project@aimplas.es
In this section, you can access to the latest technical information related to the FUTURE project topic.
Shared Social License: Mining and Conservation in the Peruvian Andes
Over the last two decades financial relationships between conservation and extraction have become conspicuously close. Both sectors unabashedly publicized these business deals as a form of greening extraction and marketizing conservation. This essay uses a case study in Perຠto propose a tentative theory of how this seemingly incompatible but very profitable union unfolds on the ground. The development of fictitious commodities in nature for each sector is examined and the labor theory of value is combined with the labor of persuasive work to expose a fundamental shared need in both sectors: in Peràº's contemporary political and economic context extractive and conservation actors increasingly must persuade landowners"”usually indigenous communities"”to allow for specific forms of capital to flow through their territory. In some cases this need to secure the "social license" is shared across sectors and the labor to secure the license can be undertaken together.
ResumenDurante las dos àºltimas décadas las relaciones financieras entre la conservacià³n y la extraccià³n se han vuelto notablemente estrecha. Ambos sectores descaradamente divulgan sus acuerdos mutuales como una forma de ecologizacià³n de extraccià³n y mercantilizacià³n de la conservacià³n. Este ensayo utiliza un estudio de caso en Perຠpara proponer una teoràa tentativa de cà³mo esta unià³n, aparentemente incompatible pero muy rentable, se revela. El desarrollo de mercancàas ficticias en la naturaleza de cada sector se examina y la teoràa del valor"trabajo se combina con el labor de persuasià³n para exponer una necesidad compartida fundamental entre ambos sectores: en el contexto polàtico y econà³mico del Perຠcontemporà¡neo, cada vez mà¡s actores extractivas y de conservacià³n se necesita persuadir propietarios de tierras"”por lo general las comunidades indàgenas"”para permitir formas especàficas de capital fluir a través de su territorio. En algunos casos esta necesidad de asegurar la "licencia social" es compartida en los dos sectores y la mano de obra para obtener la licencia se puede emprender juntos.

» Author: Timothy B. Norris
» Source: Wiley
C/ Gustave Eiffel, 4
(València Parc Tecnològic) - 46980
PATERNA (Valencia) - SPAIN
(+34) 96 136 60 40
Project Management department - Sustainability and Industrial Recovery
life-future-project@aimplas.es
