Digging for Gold or Justice? Misrecognition and Marginalization of “Illegal” Small-Scale Miners in Ghana

被引:0
作者
Daisy Rose Ofori
Jerome Jeffison Ofori
机构
[1] University of Adelaide,
来源
Social Justice Research | 2018年 / 31卷
关键词
Small-scale mining; Social justice; Illegality; Marginalization; Ghana;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Artisanal small-scale mining remains a concern to many mineral-rich countries in the developing world. In Ghana, a significant number of those engaged in the sector are operating illegally. The ubiquity of the illegal mining sector has posed a policy challenge to the government, and high-handed measures to curb the problem have failed. This study contributes to our understanding of the problem by providing a more nuanced alternative perspective to the illegality discourse that has informed discussions and policy till now. Based on qualitative primary data collected from Noyem, a mining community in Ghana, the study shows that the so-called illegal small-scale mining is an outcome of existing social injustices suffered by the miners. It further reveals that those engaged in the sector are not homogenous but differentiated by class and motive. The study recommends among others that government addresses the identified social injustices rather than simply focusing on law enforcement to address the problem.
引用
收藏
页码:355 / 373
页数:18
相关论文
共 50 条
[1]  
Amankwah R(2003)Strategies for sustainable development of the small-scale gold and diamond mining industry of Ghana Resources Policy 29 131-138
[2]  
Anim-Sackey C(2001)Ghana’s mining sector: Its contribution to the national economy Resources Policy 27 61-75
[3]  
Aryee BN(2012)Contribution of the minerals and mining sector to national development: Ghana’s experiment Great Insights 1 14-15
[4]  
Aryee BN(2003)Trends in the small-scale mining of precious minerals in Ghana: A perspective on its environmental impact Journal of Cleaner Production 11 131-140
[5]  
Aryee BN(2001)Accessing hidden and hard-to-reach populations: Snowball research strategies Social research update 33 1-4
[6]  
Ntibery BK(2003)Improving the environmental management of small-scale gold mining in Ghana: A case study of Dumasi Journal of Cleaner Production 11 215-221
[7]  
Atorkui E(2008)Challenges with eradicating illegal mining in Ghana: A perspective from the grassroots Resources Policy 33 29-38
[8]  
Atkinson R(2015)Comparative assessment of heavy metals in drinking water sources in two small-scale mining communities in northern Ghana International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 12 10620-760
[9]  
Flint J(2007)Occupying the margins: Labour integration and social exclusion in artisanal mining in Tanzania Development and Change 38 735-120
[10]  
Babut M(1995)From redistribution to recognition? Dilemmas of justice in a post-socialist age New Left Review 212 68-87