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Publication: Multinational Mines and Communities of Place: Revisiting the Stakeholder Dialogue Discourse in Geita, Tanzania

Cover of the thesis Multinational mines and communities of place

In his PhD thesis, Albert Tibaijuka demonstrates that analysis of the antagonistic relationship between multinational mines and communities, offers a productive way through which deeper understanding of corporate–community relations, particularly stakeholder dialogue practices can be developed.

Like many other developing countries hosting multinational mines in rural communities, Tanzania has not only witnessed a mushrooming investment in its extractive industry, but has also experienced continuous contestation and disagreements between key stakeholders in the industry. This study demonstrates that analysis of the antagonistic relationship between multinational mines and communities, offers a productive way through which deeper understanding of corporate – community relations, particularly stakeholder dialogue practices can be developed. The study views this ‘battleground’ as not necessarily a problem. Instead, it employs an analytical approach to the actions, views and perspectives of community of place, to offer a locally grounded construct of stakeholder dialogue.

Albert Kazaura Tibaijuka received his PhD in African Studies (University of Basel, Switzerland) in 2016. He is a lecturer at the St. Augustine University of Tanzania, Mwanza.

Albert Kazaura Tibaijuka: Multinational Mines and Communities of Place. Revistiting the Stakeholder Dialogue Discourse in Geita, Tanzania (Schweizerische Afrikastudien - Etudes africaines suisses, Vol. 16), Lit-Verlag 2020.