NEO-NATIONALISM’S
PREMISES & CONTENTIONS / Concur co-stewardships with communities
affected by extractive industries
Erle Frayne D. Argonza
Our mining sector had
been in the doldrums for quite some time now. The production levels of both (a)
base metals and (b) precious metals have surely been at lackluster levels.
Meantime, logging has been totally banned to arrest further deforestration and
its accompanying desertification and soil erosion. It is only in the energy
sector where extraction has been impressively high, and the sector is
appreciably a very dynamic one even in terms of R&D considerations. We are
now at the crossroads concerning such sectors as mining and forest resources,
where a revivified extraction is in the pipelines but couldn’t move because of
constitutional and/or statutory constraints.
Note that most of the
country’s natural resources for extraction are habituated by (a) tribal peoples
and (b) migratory slash & burn peasants. Such populations have long
‘guarded’ the resource-rich habitats. It would surely be a faulty policy to
drive them away—hidden under the euphemism of ‘relocation’—in order to give way
to a mining concessionaire. Likewise would it be unsound to merely integrate
some of their members as wage laborers for the extraction operations. Such
actions, derived from regarding the people as ‘high disutility’ entities, are
plain reactionary, even as they push the populations to the limits, leading to
the folks to constitute hostile millennial movements and rebel separatists. The
moves are reactionary as they contribute to the weakening of the nation, to the
fragmentation of the national community.
The most pro-active path
to address the concerned issue is to design and concur stewardship arrangements
with the said populations. Three things are addressed by the stewardship: (1)
the people will stay in the area, with better housing and amenities, who in
turn will monitor and safeguard the entire operational sites; (2) where
necessary, the same folks will be employed in the operations and administrative
jobs where applicable, on a first priority basis; and, (3) the people will be
co-owners of the firm, with equity/stock participation derived through a
calibration of their productivity potency, historical role in stewardship of the
area, and other variables. It is argued that this stewardship path is the
win/win formula for the state, investors (market), and the communities
concerned (‘social capital’/civil society). Consequently, the contribution to
the GDP through resource extraction jumps up to a historic high level.
[From: Erle Frayne D.
Argonza, “New Nationalism: Grandeur and Glory at Work!”. August 2004. For the Office of External Affairs –
Political Cabinet Cluster, Office of the President, Malacaňan Palace.]
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