INCO in Paradise
The International Nickel Company in New Caledonia, 1959-1990
Format:Paperback
Publisher:McGill-Queen's University Press
Publishing:4th Aug '26
£31.00
This title is due to be published on 4th August, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

Between 1960 and 1990 the Canadian mining giant International Nickel (INCO) sought to establish operations in New Caledonia, a French-controlled Pacific archipelago that holds some of the world’s richest nickel reserves. What might have seemed a straightforward mining venture quickly became a flashpoint: New Caledonians pressed for control over their political and economic future, while France regarded INCO’s presence as a challenge to its sovereignty.
The ultimate frustration of INCO’s Pacific ambitions is a case study in the entangled forces of colonial power, global capital, and local resistance that marked the late twentieth century. INCO in Paradise offers fundamental insights into the actions of a Canadian corporate behemoth and its place within broader colonial and decolonial currents. Drawing on archival research conducted in four countries, the book ties together the history of New Caledonia; INCO’s role in debates over New Caledonian autonomy and their impact on Canada-France relations; the failure of the Compagnie française industrielle et minière du Pacifique (COFIMPAC), an experimental joint venture; and INCO’s interest in the Tiébaghi project. New Caledonian sources, which foreground the voices and urgent concerns of the country’s people, contribute a particularly valuable element.
Set against the turbulence of the global nickel market, INCO’s experiences in New Caledonia reveal a transnational history whose effects are still felt today in the independence referendums of 2018–21 and the political upheaval of 2024. INCO in Paradise is a vital account of the history of New Caledonia, the global mining industry, and the transnational dimensions of Canadian business history.
“The overseas operations of Canadian mining companies have been a subject of study, though rarely by historians. INCO in Paradise delves into local and international politics and offers interesting, nuanced, and persuasive arguments about the actions of this Canadian mining company and its place in wider colonial and decolonial currents. This is an important book.” – Asa McKercher, St Francis Xavier University
ISBN: 9780228027737
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
300 pages