2014
DOI: 10.1016/j.futures.2013.08.003
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Dispossession, exploitation or employment? Youth livelihoods and extractive industry investment in Sierra Leone

Abstract: The impacts that increased transnational extractive industry investments are having on local populations in natural resource-rich regions of sub-Saharan Africa are diverse, far-reaching and complex. A surge of recent investment has been variously met by resistance and rejection, by acquiescence combined with demands for better labour conditions, and outright acceptance in anticipation of gainful employment. Drawing on recent field-based research carried out in diamondiferous Kono District in Sierra Leone, this… Show more

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Cited by 20 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…In contrast, Grätz cited miners' excessive food consumption in boom times in Benin (25) . Finally, Maconachie and collaborators examined connections between agriculture and ASM in Sierra (28,51,(64)(65)(66) . None of these authors, however, examined nutrition or food environments further.…”
Section: Food Environments and Food Choicementioning
confidence: 99%
“…In contrast, Grätz cited miners' excessive food consumption in boom times in Benin (25) . Finally, Maconachie and collaborators examined connections between agriculture and ASM in Sierra (28,51,(64)(65)(66) . None of these authors, however, examined nutrition or food environments further.…”
Section: Food Environments and Food Choicementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The study contributes to a growing body of scholarship addressing the policing of artisanal mining in Sub-Saharan Africa (e.g. Duffy 2007; Hilson & Yakovleva 2007; Geenen 2012; Maconachie 2014) while also responding to recent calls in the literature for more empirically rooted and historically specific studies on the complex ramifications of state reconfigurations in rural Zimbabwe (Alexander & McGregor 2013).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 88%
“…It opens new frontiers for commodification through extra-economic means, such as law, coercion, or violence. This commodification may occur by: financializing nature or life itself (Fairhead, Leach and Scoones 2012;Goldman 2005;Orozco-Quintero and King 2018;Prudham 2007;Sullivan 2013); developing credit systems that produce new sources of returns on investment through debt (Keating, Rasmussen and Rishi 2010;Soederberg 2013); or developing mining projects that transform communities, ecologies, labor, and governance (Holden, Nadeau and Jacobson 2011;Maconachie 2014;Rousselin 2018). Creating these sources of investment often displaces those currently utilizing the resource (Beymer-Farris and Bassett 2012; Cavanagh 2018), separating them from privately or commonly owned means of production and compelling them sell their labor power.…”
Section: Anticipating Accumulation By Dispossessionmentioning
confidence: 99%