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Company towns in America, 1880 to 1930 /Clark, Julie D. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--Humboldt State University, 2006. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 102-104). Also available via Humboldt Digital Scholar.
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The evolution of the company town /Caldicott, R. C. January 1978 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.U.R.P.) -- University of Adelaide, Dept. of Architecture, 1979.
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An analysis of the stable single resource mining community in British ColumbiaGunder, Robert John Michael January 1981 (has links)
This thesis examines the problems of impermanence, isolation and external dependency of single resource mining communities (SRMCs) in British Columbia. It poses the question: can the problems of SRMCs be resolved within the parameters of our present planning/decision-making system?
After an outline of the historical evolution and the specific problems of SRMCs identified in the Canadian literature, demonstrating the inherent impermanence of these communities, the study reviews relevent critical literature from the field of political economy. The reviewed literature suggests the significance of socially allocated indirect wages such as social services and infrastructure for the perception of quality of life by British Columbians, and in particular to the problems of isolation and dependency of SRMCs. Three groups of concerned actors " in SRMCs are identified: government, multinational extraction companies, and community residents. These actors' goals and resultant roles are determined from the literature and inter-actor conflict and alliances explored, along with their respective value positions and ideology.
Liberal belief in the value of economic growth results in an alliance between government and organized capital. To facilitate provincial development in a competitive global economy, the provincial government tries to minimize
extraction expenditures for the mining companies, attempting to provide low aggregate labour costs while still maintaining a politically stable environment. This government/corporate alliance results in lower than (provincial) average levels of indirect wages for residents of SRMCs. Furthermore, local self-determination is purposely limited. These conditions create many of the typical SRMC problems, leading to community dissatifaction and high turnover rates.
A case study of the five-volume provincial Plan for Tumbler Ridge is then undertaken. It was found that the dominant goal of the plan is to create a community capable of attracting and maintaining a viable labour force at lowest government and corporate cost. Proposed levels of collective consumption are intentionally lower than in non-SRMCs and below provincial standards. Seventy percent of the repayment of the community's direct costs is allocated to Tumbler Ridge's future residents, even though the potential life span of the community could be as little as fifteen years. The proposed per capita municipal debt is over three times higher for Tumbler Ridge than the per capita debt of Vancouver. The planning document proposes specifically limiting local government self-determination in Tumbler Ridge to protect corporate rate payers, even though the ratio of residental to corporate municipal debt is similar to the ratio in Vancouver.
The thesis concludes that a contradiction exists between the requirements of a stable community at the local level and those for attracting multinational corporate development at the provincial level. As a result SRMCs are inherently unstable. Resolution of SRMC problems does not appear likely within the constraints of our present decision-making system. Planners should acknowledge this reality and attempt to design implementable alternatives to the traditional SRMC. One efficent option may be the modern commuting work camp, allowing mine workers to live in a stable community when not at the work site. / Applied Science, Faculty of / Community and Regional Planning (SCARP), School of / Graduate
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Class and gender roles in the company towns of Millinocket and East Millinocket, Maine, and Benham and Lynch, Kentucky, 1901-2004 : a comparative history /Duff, Betty. January 2004 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.) in History--University of Maine, 2004. / Includes vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 250-263).
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A comparative approach to the study of community and work in Canadian mining and forestry towns.Dignard, Louise, January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--Carleton University, 1989. / Also available in electronic format on the Internet.
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Decision-making in a one-industry townCompany townsPort, Albert Walter January 1972 (has links)
Communities with relatively undiversified economies are an intermediate category between the monolithic "company town" and the industrially diversified metropolis. A community with an undiversified
economic base is influenced by factors external to it, including absentee ownership of industry and the international market. The part which the "company" plays in the decision-making process of such a community is examined. Propositions concerning the emergence and viability of decision-makers in this particular environment are considered.
Research was carried out in a community- of 12,000 people which depends heavily on a single industry. Leaders were identified by a multi-step approach which, drew on a panel of knowledgeable persons in the community. Twenty-two men identified as leaders were interviewed. Their interrelationships and participation in decisions which affected the community were explored. The individual and collective resources available to leaders were considered.
It was found that the major employer had made unilateral decisions
on economic and organizational grounds. As long as these decisions
resulted in stability and continuity for the community this
activity was not recognized by the citizens as company participation in the decision-making process of the community. When these unilateral decisions adversely affected the community it became possible for new decision-makers to emerge from the most threatened non-company sector of the community. "New leaders" were instrumental in having the economic situation in the community redefined as problematic. Not only did new leaders emerge, but new organizations were created which, when they were defined as legitimate, provided a mechanism for tapping the resources already in the decision-making network.
Brief consideration is given to the possibility that access to the decision-making process based on unusual circumstances can be transferred into more conventional positions of power in the community. / Arts, Faculty of / Sociology, Department of / Graduate
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Reconsidering staple insights: Canadian forestry and mining towns /Dignard, Louise, January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.) - Carleton University, 2004. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 276-293). Also available in electronic format on the Internet.
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A COMPARISON OF SOCIAL NETWORKS IN A COMPANY-OWNED TOWN AND AN INCORPORATED TOWN IN SOUTHERN ARIZONAGraham, Susan Elaine Brandt, 1946- January 1975 (has links)
No description available.
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Price et Riverbend : splendeur et declin d'une ville de compagnie /Côté, Dany, January 1993 (has links)
Mémoire (M.E.S.R.)-- Université du Québec à Chicoutimi, 1993. / Document électronique également accessible en format PDF. CaQCU
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A territorial regional perspective for resource settlement planningBell, James William Stanley January 1985 (has links)
This thesis addresses the problem of resource town instability and focuses on resource settlement planning, assuming that a stable resource community is dependent on the settlement planning approach. The problem is addressed through the development of a new theoretical approach. It stems in part from a synthesis of the two dominant perspectives in the literature on resource towns --the "internal" and the "external" perspective. The internal perspective is expressed in the traditional resource settlement literature. Its goal is a stable labour supply to be attained by a focus on the physical and social attributes of the towns. This literature assumes a stable workforce stems from a stable community which can be achieved through physical and social planning applied at the community level.
The external perspective is expressed by the critical resource settlement literature. Its goal is stable labour demand to be attained by a radical restructuring of the regional and provincial economy. The critical literature assumes that the long term stability of a resource community's employment base is dependent on fluctuating external markets over which the community has no control. The flaw of the internal perspective is its failure to address the need for long term stable labour demand. The external perspective is flawed by the absence of a policy prescription for settlement planning.
The research methods comprise a review of the literature on planning theory, resource settlement planning and regional development. The proposed perspective is elaborated through a comparison of theoretical concepts with current British Columbia provincial policy as manifest in three recent applications; Elkford, Tumbler Ridge and Northwestern British Columbia.
The result is a synthesis of the internal and external perspectives providing an alternative resource settlement planning approach which addresses resource community stability in the long as well as the short term.
The salient points of the proposed resource settlement planning approach are-.
• A territorial rather than a functional interpretation of regional development and settlement planning based on:
- an internal regional focus for development which utilizes
local social and economic goals;
- a composite interpretation of the region, comprised of
social, cultural, physical and economic dimensions;
- a conservationist approach to resource use; and
- a long run perspective in evaluating development.
• The replacement of the goal of community stability by the goal of regional resilience. A resilient region is comprised of economically, socially and politically interlinked settlements which jointly serve the region's population;
• A strategic planning process which employs bottom up representation involving local institutions and interest groups.
The Elkford and Tumbler Ridge case studies indicate that the current provincial policy; 1. Relies on a strategic planning process, 2. attempts to move towards bottom up representation in implementing settlement plans and 3. is effective in creating short term community stability. But the current policy has not addressed long term stability.
The territorial regional settlement planning approach developed in this thesis was tested for Northwest British Columbia. Suggested "ideal" planning actions for Northwest British Columbia are:
• A shift in focus from examining settlement options which will best serve mining interests to an analysis of how mining can best serve regional development;
• A development strategy which looks at alternative forms of development and the relationship between them and the mining proposals;
• The use of the mine projects to encourage economic and social diversification in existing settlements in the southern part of the northwest region;
• Greater use of local institutions and interest groups in the planning and implementation phase; and
• The use of regionally based criteria in examining the settlement options.
Given existing provincial resource settlement policies, two steps can be taken to move towards a territorial regional approach to resource settlement planning: 1. use and build upon existing settlement systems, and 2. use resource projects to foster regionally based economic diversification by planning ahead. / Applied Science, Faculty of / Community and Regional Planning (SCARP), School of / Graduate
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