The socio-economic impact of mine industry commuting labour force on source communities

There has been considerable interest in, and often criticism of, long distance commuting (LDC), an encompassing term for the fly-in/fly-out (FIFO),drive-in/drive-out(DIDO)and bus-in/bus-out(BIBO)work arrangements utilised by the resources industry that have sustained the mining industry in Australia...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: McKenzie, Fiona Haslam, Hoath, Aileen
Format: Journal Article
Published: Pergamon 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/16645
_version_ 1848749235712819200
author McKenzie, Fiona Haslam
Hoath, Aileen
author_facet McKenzie, Fiona Haslam
Hoath, Aileen
author_sort McKenzie, Fiona Haslam
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description There has been considerable interest in, and often criticism of, long distance commuting (LDC), an encompassing term for the fly-in/fly-out (FIFO),drive-in/drive-out(DIDO)and bus-in/bus-out(BIBO)work arrangements utilised by the resources industry that have sustained the mining industry in Australia in recent decades. LDC workers leave their resident community and live away from home in a host community, (usually considerable distance away), returning (typically, several days or weeks later) for furlough. The majority of the academic interest has focused on the impact of LDC on the host community (the community where a person works), individual workers and their families. To date there has been limited focus on how LDC impacts on the resident community (where the LDC worker lives when not working) and where their family usually resides. This paper documents a comprehensive research project which examined the socio-economic implications of long distant commute (LDC) workforce arrangements in the resources sector for two source or resident localities and their communities in regional Australia, (as distinct from the host communities where mines operate). They are distant from mining operations, but now home to significant or growing LDC population cohorts. Focusing on two Western Australian case study sites, the project employed a multi-method, iterative approach to identify and document the size and distribution of the LDC cohort in each case study area, and the associated diverse but interrelated effects and issues. This paper reports that LDC takes considerable personal and community effort to be successful, but there are benefits to be had.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T07:17:43Z
format Journal Article
id curtin-20.500.11937-16645
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T07:17:43Z
publishDate 2014
publisher Pergamon
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-166452017-09-13T15:42:44Z The socio-economic impact of mine industry commuting labour force on source communities McKenzie, Fiona Haslam Hoath, Aileen Economic distribution of mine income Labour force mobility Source communities Long distance commuting There has been considerable interest in, and often criticism of, long distance commuting (LDC), an encompassing term for the fly-in/fly-out (FIFO),drive-in/drive-out(DIDO)and bus-in/bus-out(BIBO)work arrangements utilised by the resources industry that have sustained the mining industry in Australia in recent decades. LDC workers leave their resident community and live away from home in a host community, (usually considerable distance away), returning (typically, several days or weeks later) for furlough. The majority of the academic interest has focused on the impact of LDC on the host community (the community where a person works), individual workers and their families. To date there has been limited focus on how LDC impacts on the resident community (where the LDC worker lives when not working) and where their family usually resides. This paper documents a comprehensive research project which examined the socio-economic implications of long distant commute (LDC) workforce arrangements in the resources sector for two source or resident localities and their communities in regional Australia, (as distinct from the host communities where mines operate). They are distant from mining operations, but now home to significant or growing LDC population cohorts. Focusing on two Western Australian case study sites, the project employed a multi-method, iterative approach to identify and document the size and distribution of the LDC cohort in each case study area, and the associated diverse but interrelated effects and issues. This paper reports that LDC takes considerable personal and community effort to be successful, but there are benefits to be had. 2014 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/16645 10.1016/j.resourpol.2014.09.002 Pergamon restricted
spellingShingle Economic distribution of mine income
Labour force mobility
Source communities
Long distance commuting
McKenzie, Fiona Haslam
Hoath, Aileen
The socio-economic impact of mine industry commuting labour force on source communities
title The socio-economic impact of mine industry commuting labour force on source communities
title_full The socio-economic impact of mine industry commuting labour force on source communities
title_fullStr The socio-economic impact of mine industry commuting labour force on source communities
title_full_unstemmed The socio-economic impact of mine industry commuting labour force on source communities
title_short The socio-economic impact of mine industry commuting labour force on source communities
title_sort socio-economic impact of mine industry commuting labour force on source communities
topic Economic distribution of mine income
Labour force mobility
Source communities
Long distance commuting
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/16645