Authors
Deanna Kemp, Carol J Bond, Daniel M Franks, Claire Cote
Publication date
2010/11/1
Journal
Journal of cleaner production
Volume
18
Issue
15
Pages
1553-1562
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
The minerals industry interacts with water in many different ways that can affect the environment and communities. In the context of emerging debates about the status of access to water as a distinct human right and the mining industry’s engagement with human rights discourses, this article highlights points of disconnection between technical, scientific and engineering-based approaches to water management on the one hand and human rights perspectives on the other. We argue that greater understanding and emphasis on the intersecting nature of water and human rights is important from a sustainable development perspective. Better connections will increase the likelihood that mining companies will respect human rights, avoid or mitigate adverse social and environmental risks that occur through their interaction with water and collaboratively identify water-related development opportunities. Discursive …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
D Kemp, CJ Bond, DM Franks, C Cote - Journal of cleaner production, 2010