<p>This book helps substantially in clarifying the partnership idea. It focuses on partnerships in which business and industry have a leading role. This is a book for everyone who is interested in the follow-up of the WSSD: companies, social partnerships, governments and NGOs. Even more widely, this is a book for all those who are concerned about making the reduction of poverty a reality. - International Journal of Environment and Pollution, 5 September 2006 </p><p>One of the most definitive studies on partnerships to date ... Lots has been said about the benefits of partnerships over corporates going it alone, but rarely is this accepted wisdom fleshed out. - Corporate Citizen Briefing, June/July 2004 </p><p> ... an extraordinary account of four years of very significant work in partnerships and is without doubt an enormously important contribution to developing literature in this field. - The Corporate Citizen Vol. 4 Issue 2 (2004) </p><p>This excellent book ... has brought, to development literature and development practitioners, a rich and textured source of practical information and advice on how to put effective partnerships together. It provides direction on necessary conditions for effective partnerships, how to make partnerships thrive, the key pitfalls to avoid, and the the ways to monitor the partnership during development and implementation. For those in the private sector, government and civil society who are trying to address poverty and development challenges, this book is an exceptional business and development tool. - Journal of Environmental Assessment Policy and Management Vol. 7 No. 1 (March 2005) </p><p>Putting Partnerships to Work is about how partnerships work, the types of outcomes that can be achieved, and the necessary conditions for partnerships to be successful. - UNEP Industry and Environment, October-December 2004</p>

This text shares practical experiences in establishing and implementing partnerships for development between business, government and civil society. The focus is on the oil, gas and mining industries, who increasingly operate in regions characterized by poor communities and fragile environments.
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This text shares practical experiences in establishing and implementing partnerships for development between business, government and civil society. The focus is on the oil, gas and mining industries, who increasingly operate in regions characterized by poor communities and fragile environments.
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Preface Michael Warner and Rory Sullivan 1. Introduction Rory Sullivan and Michael Warner 2. Building Blocks for Partnerships Michael Warner Part 1: Case studies 3. Shell Petroleum Development Corporation, Nigeria: Partnering and Environmental Impact Assessment Rory Sullivan and Michael Warner 4. Integrated Coal Mining Limited, India: Livelihoods Assessment, Road Construction and Healthcare Rory Sullivan, Santiago Porto and Michael Warner, with Amit Mukherjee, Rajat Das and Joydev Mazumdar 5. Placer Dome and Corporacion Venezolana de Guayana (Minera Las Cristinas CA, Venezuela): Healthcare Partnership James Tull, Edgardo Garcia Larralde, Alex Mansutti and Santiago Porto, with Nicola Acutt, Ralph Hamann and Michael Warner 6. Transredes, Bolivia: Managing Oil-spill Compensation Vicky Copeman and Enrique Rivas 7. BP and Others, Azerbaijan: Conflict Prevention Nick Killick 8. Kahama Mining Corporation Limited, Tanzania: Social Development Programme Rory Sullivan and Aida Kiangi 9. Konkola Copper Mines plc, Zambia: Local Business Development and Partnerships Rory Sullivan 10. Kelian Equatorial Mining, Indonesia: Mine Closure Ralph Hamann 11. BP Exploration Company: Contributing to Long-term Regional Development in Casanare, Colombia Michael Warner, Edgardo Garcia Larralde and Rory Sullivan Part 2: Partnership tools 12. Getting Started Michael Warner 13. Partnership Monitoring Michael Warner 14. Measuring the Added Value of Partnerships Jol Mitchell, Jill Shakleman and Michael Warner Part 3: Issues 15. Towards Evidence of the Costs and Benefits of Partnerships Nicola Acutt with Ralph Hamann, Assheton Carter and Paul Kapelus 16. Ownership and Control of Outcomes Aidan Davy 17. Companies in Conflict Situations: A Role for Partnerships? Aidan Davy 18. Partnerships and Local Corporate Foundations Ralph Hamann, with Nicola Acutt and Assheton Carter 19. Managing Community Expectations through Partnerships Aidan Davy 20. Learning from Project Partnering in the Construction Industry Dom Verschoyle and Michael Warner Part 4: Conclusions 21. Conclusions Rory Sullivan and Michael Warner Appendix A: Example of a Grievance-resolution Process Appendix B: Example of a Partnership Memorandum of Understanding: the Sarshatali Coal Mining Project Partnership for the Construction of a Metalled Link Road from Rasunpur Forest Area to Barabani Railway Yard Appendix C: Example of a Partnership Charter: Charter of the Kelian Mine Closure Steering Committee Appendix D: Checklists of Impact Indicators Appendix E: Examples of Impact Tables: The Tri-sector Healthcare Partnership, Las Cristinas Gold Mine, Venezuela, December 1999 to January 2001 Appendix F: Publications of the Natural Resource Cluster
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This book helps substantially in clarifying the partnership idea. It focuses on partnerships in which business and industry have a leading role. This is a book for everyone who is interested in the follow-up of the WSSD: companies, social partnerships, governments and NGOs. Even more widely, this is a book for all those who are concerned about making the reduction of poverty a reality. - International Journal of Environment and Pollution, 5 September 2006 One of the most definitive studies on partnerships to date ... Lots has been said about the benefits of partnerships over corporates going it alone, but rarely is this accepted wisdom fleshed out. - Corporate Citizen Briefing, June/July 2004 ... an extraordinary account of four years of very significant work in partnerships and is without doubt an enormously important contribution to developing literature in this field. - The Corporate Citizen Vol. 4 Issue 2 (2004) This excellent book ... has brought, to development literature and development practitioners, a rich and textured source of practical information and advice on how to put effective partnerships together. It provides direction on necessary conditions for effective partnerships, how to make partnerships thrive, the key pitfalls to avoid, and the the ways to monitor the partnership during development and implementation. For those in the private sector, government and civil society who are trying to address poverty and development challenges, this book is an exceptional business and development tool. - Journal of Environmental Assessment Policy and Management Vol. 7 No. 1 (March 2005) Putting Partnerships to Work is about how partnerships work, the types of outcomes that can be achieved, and the necessary conditions for partnerships to be successful. - UNEP Industry and Environment, October-December 2004
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Providing evidence not only of the viability of partnerships but also that partnership approaches can provide substantially better outcomes for all parties than can more traditional approaches to development or corporate social responsibility. "One of the most definitive studies on partnerships to date" Corporate Citizen Briefing
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781874719724
Publisert
2004-05-01
Utgiver
Vendor
Greenleaf Publishing
Vekt
660 gr
Høyde
234 mm
Bredde
152 mm
Aldersnivå
UU, UP, P, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
336

Biographical note

Dr Michael Warner is a Research Fellow with the Overseas Development Institute (ODI), London. For three years he managed the Secretariat of the Natural Resources Cluster (covering the oil, gas and mining sectors) for the World Bank's Business Partners for Development programme. In this role he acted as the broker or advisor of multi-sector partnerships involving RPG in India, Shell in Nigeria, BP in Colombia, Anglo American in Zambia and Placer Dome in Venezuela. Michael has a PhD in Environmental Management from Imperial College, University of London and worked for a number of years in developing countries as a consultant with Environmental Resources Management, London. In the mid-1990s he joined the ODI, specialising in the adaptation of interest-based negotiation to resolve disputes and develop partnerships between communities, business, governments and NGOs. He now manages a new programme at ODI to improve the social and economic performance of corporate investment in developing countries. Michael is the author of Complex Problems ... Negotiated Solutions (ITDG Publishing, 2001) and of a novella on the art of partnership broking, The New Broker: Brokering Partnerships for Development (ODI, 2003). He is also Director of the consultancy company Sustainable Negotiation Services International (SNSi) Limited. Dr Rory Sullivan has been Director, Investor Responsibility with Insight Investment (the asset management arm of HBOS plc) since October 2002. In this role, he is responsible for leading Insight's engagement activities relating to climate change, human rights, and corporate social responsibility. He also contributes to Insight's broader work on corporate governance. Rory has 15 years' experience in environmental management and public policy, having worked for the private sector and government agencies in Australia, South-East Asia, Africa and Europe. His experience includes evaluating development-focused partnerships (health, education, water) on behalf of the World Bank's Business Partners for Development programme, advising Environment Australia and the OECD on the design of pollution release and transfer registers, and assisting public- and private-sector organisations with the implementation of environmental and risk management systems. Rory is the author (with Hugh Wyndham) of Effective Environmental Management: Principles and Case Studies (Allen & Unwin, 2001), and the editor of Business and Human Rights: Dilemmas and Solutions (Greenleaf Publishing, 2003). He has written over 100 articles, book chapters and papers on human rights, environmental policy and development issues. He is also co-editor of Responsible Investment (2006). Rory holds a first-class honours degree in electrical engineering (University College Cork, Ireland), masters' degrees in Environmental Science (University of Manchester, UK) and Environmental Law (University of Sydney, Australia), and a PhD in Law (Queen Mary, University of London, UK).