
Vlado Vivoda
Dr Vlado Vivoda is Senior Lecturer in Strategic Studies (Defence and Strategic Studies Course, Australian War College) at Deakin University. Prior to moving to Deakin University, Vlado held research positions at the University of South Australia, Griffith University and the University of Queensland. He holds a B.A. (Honours) from the National University of Singapore, and an M.A. (International Relations) from the Australian National University. In 2008, he completed his Ph.D. in International Relations at Flinders University. The focus of Vlado's research is on policy and international political economy of energy and minerals. He has an extensive publication record, which includes two single-authored books, 12 book chapters, 26 peer-reviewed journal articles and numerous technical reports. His consulting work spans a diverse range of clients in the private and public sectors. Vlado has given more than one-hundred lectures and seminars at various universities and international symposia and conferences.
Phone: +61412540112
Address: Sir James Foots Building (47A)
University of Queensland
St Lucia QLD 4072
Australia
Phone: +61412540112
Address: Sir James Foots Building (47A)
University of Queensland
St Lucia QLD 4072
Australia
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Papers by Vlado Vivoda
Animated by this question, The University of Queensland’s Sustainable Minerals Institute 2018 Master Class on “Mining and Society in the 21st Century” developed a vision of an ideal future for the mining industry in 2030. Discussions explored the means to accelerate the industry’s current trajectory towards greater sustainability. The class included doctoral students and academic researchers from diverse cultural backgrounds whose mining-focused work spans a broad range of disciplines. This paper distils the outcomes of the discussions and propose actions into a framework that centres on the interface between mining companies, governments and host communities. We argue that there are several concrete actions that the mining industry should adopt immediately to promote trust between stakeholders and strengthen the industry’s contribution to achieving the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals.
Animated by this question, The University of Queensland’s Sustainable Minerals Institute 2018 Master Class on “Mining and Society in the 21st Century” developed a vision of an ideal future for the mining industry in 2030. Discussions explored the means to accelerate the industry’s current trajectory towards greater sustainability. The class included doctoral students and academic researchers from diverse cultural backgrounds whose mining-focused work spans a broad range of disciplines. This paper distils the outcomes of the discussions and propose actions into a framework that centres on the interface between mining companies, governments and host communities. We argue that there are several concrete actions that the mining industry should adopt immediately to promote trust between stakeholders and strengthen the industry’s contribution to achieving the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals.