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The viability of remote mining communities

Insights from community perceptions and employment impact assessments

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Stuart Andrew Robertson , Boyd Dirk Blackwell , James Alexander McFarlane

20 July 2017

English

Mining Towns Librarian

Journal article

Municipal Capability & Partnership Programme

Australia

This article examines community perceptions and employment impacts to assess ex ante the post-mining viability of two settlements in remote north-east South Australia. The results reinforce grave concerns over their future viability following mine closure. However, government employees and traditional owners are more optimistic than other groups about community futures beyond mining. Employment impacts represent approximately 80 and 75% (225 & 1616) of jobs and 90 and 80% ($30 m & $164 m) of employment income in the two locations (Leigh Creek, Roxby Downs). These impacts reach beyond mining into other sectors, particularly Public Services and Trade and Accommodation respectively, and further limit economic diversity and opportunity.

 

Building alternative futures in remote locations like these is problematic, though not impossible. Policy responses should reflect differences in perceptions, impact and case-specific contexts: settlements at the end of their life cycles like Leigh Creek require emergency action including institutional reform; settlements still in the early stages like Roxby Downs have time to begin planning now, though not yet conceived, for a future without mining.


This resource is part of the Mining Towns Collection kindly sponsored by the Municipal Capability and Partnership ProgrammeAbstract based on source.

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Australia

Built environment

Communities

Economics and development

Governance

Human settlements

Livelihoods

Mining Towns

Mining Towns Collection

Planning

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