These books have been published by International Books, A.
Numankade 17, 3572 KP Utrecht, The Netherlands. Order your
copy by mail.
The Gulliver File
Mines, people and land: a global battlefield
Roger Moody
On mining, mining companies and indigenous land rights. A tool
for communities opposing mining activities
. 672 companies
. country and company index
. thousands of footnotes
. addresses of companies
. addresses of communities opposing mining
ISBN 90 6224 999 x
896 pp, hb.
DFL 79,00, USd 50.00, BPounds 25
"An invaluable resource." The Times Higher Education
Supplement
The Indigenous Voice
Visions and realities
Edited by Roger Moody
A comprehensive presentation of indigenous peoples' own world
views. Increasingly marginalized in their own countries,
indigenous peoples are actively responding with campaigns and
organizations. The writings raise fundamental questions about
the validity of accepted development strategies and goals.
Writings include public declarations, analyses, personal
testimonies, on present day struggles, the nuclear state,
mining and multinationals, dams and deforestation, racism,
forced labour and cultural destruction.
ISBN 90 6224 990 6
760 pp, pb, illustrations
DFL 49,00, USd 25.00, BPounds 18.50
Indigenous or Aboriginal Rights to Property:
A Papua New Guinea perspective
Peter Donigi
Papua New Guinea land- owner, lawyer and diplomat Peter Donigi
forcefully argues the case that multinational mining
activities are being carried out unconstitutionally in his
country. He supports his argument with an extensive study of
national, colonial and international law pertaining to
landrights. Disenfranchised communities around the world, from
East Germany to Australia, will value this rigourous research.
Many primary sources, including British and German colonial
rulings on, among others, the development of mining
activities, are reproduced as appendices.
ISBN 90 6224 988 4
96 pp, pb
DFL 29,95, USd 15.00, BPounds 9.95
The Mekong Currency
Lives and times of a river
Liesbeth Sluiter
The mighty river Mekong journeys through China, Laos,
Thailand, Cambodia and Vietnam before spilling into the South
China Sea. Photo-journalist Liesbeth Sluiter follows the
river, documenting the interdependency of the river and the
people it feeds. The relationship is under threat due to plans
to dam vast sections of the river. These large-scale dam
projects were first planned to take place in the 1950s, but
with the expansion of communism in the area European
'developers' were forced to set their plans aside. Trade-bans
are now being lifted, and the people of the Mekong face a new
threat.
Poignant texts, stunning photos.
ISBN 90 6224 989 2
168 pp, pb, 300 black and white photos,
DFL 39,00, USd 19.95, BPounds 14.95
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