376 pages, 6 x 9
Paperback
Release Date:31 Oct 2002
ISBN:9780824825669
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The Politics of Power

Freeport in Suharto's Indonesia

University of Hawaii Press

Even as Major General Suharto consolidated his power in the bloodletting of the mid-sixties, Freeport-McMoRan, the American transnational mining company, signed a contract with the new military regime, the first foreign company to do so. Today, in the isolated jungles of West Papua, a region that is increasingly restive under Indonesian rule, Freeport lays claim to the world’s largest gold mine and one of its richest and most profitable copper mines. This volume is the first major analysis of the company’s presence in Indonesia. It takes a close and detailed look at the changing nature of power relations between Freeport and Suharto, the Indonesian military, the traditional landowners (the Amungme and Kamoro), and environmental and human rights groups. It examines how and why an American company, despite such rigorous home-state laws, was able to operate in West Papua with impunity for nearly thirty years and adapt to, indeed thrive in, a business culture anchored in corruption, collusion, and nepotism.

Fine investigative journalism as well as good scholarship The International History Review
Timely and welcome Sydney Morning Herald
It would be difficult to write a dull book about Freeport McMoran’s operations in West Papua.... Denise Leith has done the story justice and has succeeded in her stated goal to write the definitive account of Freeport’s engagement with Suharto’s Indonesia. Journal of Asian Studies
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