Abstract:
In South Africa, the right to a clean environment and environmental
sustainability is constitutionally guaranteed. Also, the Mineral and Petroleum
Resources Development Act (MPRDA) sets certain obligations to mining and
the extractive industry in general, including having to conduct their operations
in a manner that takes into account the socio-economic conditions of the
mining communities. However, preliminary investigations suggest that these
obligations are being ignored and the rights of mining communities are violated
daily by the mining industry. Mining communities often bear the brunt of the
negative effects of mining operations. With the economic expansion trend in
Africa and multinational corporations (MNCs) conducting extractive
operations, the protection of mining communities remains a critical issue for
the extractive industry. Mining communities must be part of the mining
stakeholders who should benefit from the equitable and sustainable
distribution of mineral resources. The starting point is to have in place
sustainable mining practices that extend to the promotion of the socioeconomic development of mining communities or communities affected by mining activities.
The study moves from the proposition that there is a need to develop a
corporate social responsibility (CSR) theory or approach that addresses the
specific circumstances of rural mining communities. This study further
contents that the enshrinement of environmental rights in the South African
Constitution not only requires mining communities to be aware of their
environmental rights and the rights to sustainable development. Failure to
understand the importance of these rights and the relationship between
these rights will ensure that sustainable development will remain paper
tigers.
The methodology used in the research is primarily desktop which entails the
study of primary and secondary literature. The adopted descriptive, doctrinal
analysis and comparative perspectives research methods. Using CSR as the
main theoretical underpinning of the study, the researcher conducts a juridical
and comparative investigation of the contribution of mining companies in South
Africa towards the socio-economic development of rural mining communities.
Theories of sustainable development and the human rights-based approach
will be complementary conceptual frameworks towards the execution of the
study.
The study concludes that there is a plethora of legislation that regulates other
aspects of CSR, but very few that focus on socioeconomic development and
the protection of the rights of dwellers of mining communities. To this end, one
of the recommendations by the researcher is the introduction of legislation that
regulates the socio-economic development of mining communities through
CSR. The researcher provides a draft recommended legislation.