Reprint

Benefit Sharing in the Arctic

Extractive Industries and Arctic People

Edited by
August 2020
214 pages
  • ISBN978-3-03936-164-9 (Hardback)
  • ISBN978-3-03936-165-6 (PDF)

This book is a reprint of the Special Issue Benefit Sharing in the Arctic: Extractive Industries and Arctic People that was published in

Business & Economics
Environmental & Earth Sciences
Summary

This book provides a first-of-its-kind review and analysis of benefit sharing frameworks between extractive industries and Indigenous and local communities in different parts of the Arctic. The authors describe a wealth of case studies in order to examine predominant practices, policies, arrangements, mechanisms and impact assessment methodologies. They also discuss possible ways to improve and advance existing benefit sharing regimes, in order to attain fair and equitable benefit sharing and support sustainable development. Among the topics covered in the book are corporate social responsibility and social license to operate, principles and methodologies of determining compensation, legal and informal frameworks of benefit sharing, community response to extractive activities, and global-to-local linkages that shape benefit sharing processes. The book will be of interest to academics, industry experts, legal specialists, policymakers, community members concerned with industrial activities, and anyone interested in sustainable development in the Arctic.

Format
  • Hardback
License
© 2020 by the authors; CC BY-NC-ND license
Keywords
Arctic; mining industry; investment project; ecology; small-numbered peoples; damage compensation; traditional natural resource management; method of calculating losses; benefit sharing; indigenous peoples; investment projects; traditional nature management; economic mechanism; losses; compensation; the Arctic; Russia; Yakutia; arctic; Indigenous; extractive industries; international standards; benefit sharing; equity; strategic planning; indigenous people; oil-dependent communities; oil companies; Russian Arctic; Benefit-sharing arrangements; extractive projects; natural resources; corporate citizenship; stakeholder management; Arctic; ethnological expertise; indigenous small-numbered peoples; business impact assessment on indigenous small-numbered peoples; traditional natural resource management territories; indigenous peoples; benefit sharing; biological and economic reserves; resource assessment; land evaluation; compensation payments; Arctic; Yakutia; benefit sharing; extractive industries; Arctic; corporate social responsibility; social license to operate; benefit sharing; oil and gas; resources; governance; Russia; resistance; governance generating networks; paternalism; partnership; corporate social responsibility; indigenous people; oil and gas companies; corporate social responsibility; Russian North; benefit sharing; legal regulation; informal roads; benefit-sharing; extractive industries; transportation infrastructure; indigenous people; benefit sharing; extractive industries; social license to operate; arctic; sustainability; natural resources; oil companies; corporate social responsibility; oil rent; equity; indigenous peoples