This book offers a pioneering window into the elusive workings of
state-corporate crime within the mining industry. It follows a campaign
of resistance organised by indigenous activists on the island of
Bougainville, who struggled to close a Rio Tinto owned copper mine, and
investigates the subsequent state-corporate response, which led to the
shocking loss of some 10,000 lives. Drawing on internal records and
interviews with senior officials, Kristian Lasslett examines how an
articulation of capitalist growth mediated through patrimonial politics,
imperial state-power, large-scale mining, and clan-based, rural society,
prompted an ostensibly 'responsible' corporate citizen, and liberal
state actors, to organise a counterinsurgency campaign punctuated with
gross human rights abuses. State Crime on the Margins of Empire
represents a unique intervention rooted in a classical Marxist tradition
that challenges positivist streams of criminological scholarship, in
order to illuminate with greater detail the historical forces faced by
communities in the global south caught in the increasingly violent
dynamics of the extractive industries.