Managing land use conflicts for sustainable futures: Tourism, agriculture and mining

This paper considers several mining ventures which are occurring in rural communities in Galicia, Spain and Western Australia, Australia. It compares and contrasts the communities where mining is taking precedence over other industries, examining the potential land use conflicts and the future of bo...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: McKenzie, Fiona Haslam, Paul, V., Hoath, Aileen
Other Authors: Dr Martens
Format: Conference Paper
Published: RWTH Aachen Univeristy 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/38639
_version_ 1848755375299362816
author McKenzie, Fiona Haslam
Paul, V.
Hoath, Aileen
author2 Dr Martens
author_facet Dr Martens
McKenzie, Fiona Haslam
Paul, V.
Hoath, Aileen
author_sort McKenzie, Fiona Haslam
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description This paper considers several mining ventures which are occurring in rural communities in Galicia, Spain and Western Australia, Australia. It compares and contrasts the communities where mining is taking precedence over other industries, examining the potential land use conflicts and the future of both the communities and the mines currently operating there. The Galician case study, Trevinca, is located 200 km inland and was once a primary producing area, notable for its scenic attributes, most particularly alpine landscapes, which have since been developed for small scale tourism purposes. Consistent with other remote, rural locations, Trevinca has an ageing demographic profile, services have been rationalised and depopulation trends have been evident for some time as young people move away to seek work elsewhere. This is despite the most lucrative local industry being slate mining. Most of the workers involved in this industry drive in and drive out (DIDO) from elsewhere and hence, many of the regional economic capital derived from slate extraction flows to other communities. The Australian case study, Boddington, by contrast, is located 100 km inland in what has traditionally been a highly productive sheep grazing area. Mining, until recently was a marginal industry in the area but due to the comparative devaluing of agriculture and the increased value of mining outputs, two mines, one extracting bauxite and the other gold and copper have increased scale and economic importance. The local population has now reversed its downward trend and there are considerable local growth pressures, particularly regarding housing. The mines workforce is a combination of DIDO and residential with the intention that the majority of workers will live locally.This paper will consider the environmental, social and economic impacts that have occurred in both the case study localities and whether strategies for the lifecycle of the mine are complimentary for the long term future of the communities supporting them. Where there have been land use conflicts, strategies for minimising the adverse outcomes will be considered.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T08:55:18Z
format Conference Paper
id curtin-20.500.11937-38639
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T08:55:18Z
publishDate 2011
publisher RWTH Aachen Univeristy
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-386392017-03-08T13:18:39Z Managing land use conflicts for sustainable futures: Tourism, agriculture and mining McKenzie, Fiona Haslam Paul, V. Hoath, Aileen Dr Martens Agriculture mining land tourism sustainability This paper considers several mining ventures which are occurring in rural communities in Galicia, Spain and Western Australia, Australia. It compares and contrasts the communities where mining is taking precedence over other industries, examining the potential land use conflicts and the future of both the communities and the mines currently operating there. The Galician case study, Trevinca, is located 200 km inland and was once a primary producing area, notable for its scenic attributes, most particularly alpine landscapes, which have since been developed for small scale tourism purposes. Consistent with other remote, rural locations, Trevinca has an ageing demographic profile, services have been rationalised and depopulation trends have been evident for some time as young people move away to seek work elsewhere. This is despite the most lucrative local industry being slate mining. Most of the workers involved in this industry drive in and drive out (DIDO) from elsewhere and hence, many of the regional economic capital derived from slate extraction flows to other communities. The Australian case study, Boddington, by contrast, is located 100 km inland in what has traditionally been a highly productive sheep grazing area. Mining, until recently was a marginal industry in the area but due to the comparative devaluing of agriculture and the increased value of mining outputs, two mines, one extracting bauxite and the other gold and copper have increased scale and economic importance. The local population has now reversed its downward trend and there are considerable local growth pressures, particularly regarding housing. The mines workforce is a combination of DIDO and residential with the intention that the majority of workers will live locally.This paper will consider the environmental, social and economic impacts that have occurred in both the case study localities and whether strategies for the lifecycle of the mine are complimentary for the long term future of the communities supporting them. Where there have been land use conflicts, strategies for minimising the adverse outcomes will be considered. 2011 Conference Paper http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/38639 RWTH Aachen Univeristy restricted
spellingShingle Agriculture
mining
land
tourism
sustainability
McKenzie, Fiona Haslam
Paul, V.
Hoath, Aileen
Managing land use conflicts for sustainable futures: Tourism, agriculture and mining
title Managing land use conflicts for sustainable futures: Tourism, agriculture and mining
title_full Managing land use conflicts for sustainable futures: Tourism, agriculture and mining
title_fullStr Managing land use conflicts for sustainable futures: Tourism, agriculture and mining
title_full_unstemmed Managing land use conflicts for sustainable futures: Tourism, agriculture and mining
title_short Managing land use conflicts for sustainable futures: Tourism, agriculture and mining
title_sort managing land use conflicts for sustainable futures: tourism, agriculture and mining
topic Agriculture
mining
land
tourism
sustainability
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/38639