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PAPERS AND BOOK CHAPTERS |
1) Heemskerk and others. 2005. Collecting data in artisanal mining communities. Measuring progress towards more sustainable livelihoods. Natural Resources Forum 29: 82-87.
2) Heemskerk, M., A. Norton, and L. De Dehn. 2004. Does public welfare crowd out informal safety nets? Ethnographic evidence from rural Latin America. World Development. 32: 941-955.
3) Peterson, G.D., M. Heemskerk, G. Barnett, E. M. Bennett, K. Blann, T. D. Beard Jr., T. Hahn, Y. Oren, E. B. Raufflet, and M. Tengö. In Press. Innovation in regional social-ecological systems: indicators for the comparison of case studies. Ecosystems.
4) Heemskerk, M., K. Wilson, and M. Pavao-Zuckerman. 2003. Modeling for communication across disciplines. Conservation Ecology 7(3) [on line]. Special issue: Human Ecosystems: Towards the integration of anthropology and ecosystem sciences. Guest Editors: T. Abel and J.R. Stepp. URL: http://www.consecol.org/vol7/iss3/
5) Heemskerk, M. 2003. Risk attitudes and mitigation among gold miners and others in the Suriname rainforest. Natural Resources Forum. 27(4): 267-278
6) Heemskerk, M. 2003. Scenarios in anthropology. Reflections on possible futures of the Suriname Maroons. Futures. Special issue: Futures of Indigenous Peoples.
7) Heemskerk, M. 2003. Self-employment and poverty alleviation. Women’s work in artisanal gold mines. Human Organization. 26 (1): 26-73
8) Heemskerk, M. 2002. Livelihood decision-making and environmental degradation: Small-scale gold mining in the Suriname Amazon. Society and Natural Resources. 15 (4): 327-344.
9) Pavao-Zuckerman, M., M. Heemskerk, and K. Wilson. 2002. Integrating the natural and social sciences. Anthropology News 43(1): 42
10) Heemskerk, M. 2001. Do international commodity prices drive natural resource booms? An empirical analysis of small-scale gold mining in Suriname. Ecological Economics. 39(2): 295-308
11) Heemskerk, M. 2001. Ndyuka update. Cultural Survival Quarterly 25(2). Special Issue: Maroons in the Americas. Heroic Pasts, Ambiguous Presents, Uncertain Futures, Richard Price & Sally Price eds.
12) Peterson, G.D. and M. Heemskerk, 2001. Deforestation and forest regeneration following small-scale gold mining in the Suriname Amazon. Environmental Conservation 28(2): 117-126
13) Heemskerk, M. 2001. Maroon gold miners and mining risks in the Suriname Amazon. Cultural Survival Quarterly 25(1). Special Issue: "Mining Indigenous Lands: Can Impacts and Benefits be Reconciled?", Saleem H. Ali & Larissa Behrendt eds., pp. 25-29
14) Heemskerk, M. 2000. Gender and gold mining. The case of the Maroons of Suriname. Working Papers on Women in International Development 269. ed. A. Ferguson. Ann Arbor: Michigan State University.
15) Heemskerk, M. and R. van der Kooye. 2003. Social, economic, and political dimensions of small-scale gold mining in Suriname. In: The Socio-economic Impact of Small-Scale Mining in Developing Countries: An Update. Gavin M. Hilson ed.
16) Heemskerk, M. 2001. Book review of: William H. Fisher. 2000. Rain Forest Exchanges. Industry and Community on an Amazonian Frontier. Washington: Smithsonian Institute Press. Practicing Anthropology 23(3): 52
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