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How have reforms fuelled the expansion of artisanal mining? Evidence from sub-Saharan Africa
Authors:Sadia Mohammed Banchirigah
Institution:Institute for Development Policy and Management (IDPM), School of Environment and Development, The University of Manchester, Harold Hankins Building, Oxford Road, Manchester M13 9QH, UK
Abstract:This paper investigates whether and how World Bank mining sector reforms have fuelled the expansion of illegal artisanal mining activity in Sub-Saharan Africa. In doing so, the analysis examines three issues. First, the emerging correlation between reforms and poverty, mainly a result of increased unemployment caused by Structural Adjustment Programmes and concurrent privatisation of state-owned enterprises, is explored. Second, the possibility that reform of large-scale mining has decreased available land for peasant farming as well as legalised small-scale mining activity is discussed. Finally, the notion that the regularisation of informal mining activities has been an exceedingly bureaucratic procedure in Africa, therefore providing individuals with little incentive to operate within the legal domain, is examined. Faced with few employment prospects, a growing number of Africans are pursuing employment in the artisanal mining sector, a worrying prospect given its intimate association with environmental degradation and HIV/AIDS.
Keywords:P28  Q01  Q34  Q38
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