Gender Mainstreaming in Mine Action | Powerful linkages for progress across the SDGs (original) (raw)

Women from Mining Affected Communities Speak Out: Defending Land, Life & Dignity

in order to represent the voices of the millions of women affected by mining around the world. Network members present at the meeting, immediately came forward to give case studies of their campaigns and Sunita Dubey and Tanya Roberts-Davis eagerly volunteered to take responsibility for making this book happen. We sincerely thank their tireless work in both finding the resources as well as in compiling the case studies that came from different campaigns and in different languages. Particularly, Tanya Roberts burnt the mid-night oil over several months to patiently put these stories together. The International Secretariat wishes to dedicate this book to the indigenous, rural, migrant, displaced and affected women living and working in the mining regions. This publication was possible because of all the contributions from community organizers, researchers, community legal specialists, Indigenous Peoples' rights activists, peasant and workers' rights advocates, and other human rights advocates. Hence our deepest respect and gratitude to all the women who were part of this collaborative initiative,

Verbrugge, H., & Van Wolputte, S. (2015). Just picking up stones: Gender and technology in a small-scale gold mining site. In A. Coles, L. Gray & J. Momsen (Eds.), A handbook on gender and development (pp. 173-182). New York: Routledge.

2015

From the introduction: In May 2013, the Australian-South African International Mining for Development Centre (IM4DC) organized an African Women in Mining and Development study tour. This initiative was not the first nor the only one of its kind, and the past decade witnessed a growing interest in the role of women in large-scale (LSM) and, especially, artisanal and small-scale mining (ASM) on the world’s mining hotspots, such as South Africa, Australia, Ghana, or Papua New Guinea. This suggests that international development initiatives only recently noticed the important role women play in mining. The reason for this may be the heroic image of muscled miners armed with headlights and pneumatic drills, covered in sweat and dust, which dominates the Western imagination when it comes to mining (see Lahiri-Dutt, this volume). This image is, no doubt, a recent product. Reforms in nineteenth-century industrializing Europe were geared towards domesticating, in every literal sense, working-class women active in mining and in heavy industry, such as textile mills. Yet, it partly explains why in popular representations and in development initiatives until recently there was no place for female miners, except in their derived capacities as worrying mothers, wives or girlfriends, or as “poor, powerless, and invariably pregnant, burdened with lots of children, or carrying one load or another on her back or head” (Win 2007: 79). This skewed image ...

Increasing Female Voices in Mine-action Planning and Prioritization

Retrieved May, 2009

The Community Strengthening and Gender Mainstreaming in Integrated Mine Action Project focuses on one of the greatest challenges women face in mine affected areas of Cambodia: to be actively and meaningfully involved in the decision-making process in mine action. ...

Empowerment through mine community development: how the politics of development perpetuate poverty in mining areas – a legal theoretical analysis

Faculty of Law, 2020

I am tremendously grateful for the guidance, dedication and never-ending optimism and energy of my supervisor, Professor Hanri Mostert. Her support extended far beyond the completion of my thesis. Family and friends provided a soundboard for the frustrations and jubilations forming part of the PhD journey. Thank you for listening and never doubting in my ability to complete this project. My baby boy, Philip, showed an incredible amount of patience (for his age) and generously shared his mom's attention with a PhD thesiswith the help of two grandmas, Minda and Annalie, and nanny Concilia. And lastly, my husband, Johan: Without his encouragement, support and unwavering faith in my abilities, finalising this project would have been impossible.

Gender and Mining: Mining and Society Research Programme

This report investigates the participation of women in mining in southern Africa. It formed part of the Mining and Minerals for Sustainable Development Research Programme and is one of the earliest studies exploring gender issues in mining in southern Africa.

Not victims, but fighters: A global overview on women's leadership in anti-mining struggles

Journal of Political Ecology

While it is known that women have a strong presence in struggles for Environmental Justice, there is a lack of knowledge about their role in them, particularly in struggles opposing mining projects. We aim to fill this gap by undertaking the first global systematization of the available data on women's anti-mining activism, using a multi-case perspective. We analyze 151 mining conflicts identified through the Environmental Justice Atlas, examining the impacts mining activities have had on women, how women responded to these, how they organized to oppose mining projects, and what challenges they faced in their activism. While our analysis reinforces many aspects discussed by Feminist Political Ecology scholars on the challenges women face in their activism, it also raises new questions about the specific impacts mining has on women, the repertoire of actions they have at their disposal as part of their activism, and how they organize to oppose mining projects, patriarchal dynamic...