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dc.contributor.authorRadley, Ben
dc.date.accessioned2023-11-17T13:42:51Z
dc.date.available2023-11-17T13:42:51Z
dc.date.issued2024
dc.identifier.urihttps://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/85205
dc.description.abstractSince the turn of the century, low-income African countries have undergone a process of mining industrialization led by transnational corporations. The process has been sustained by an African Mining Consensus uniting international financial institutions, African governments, development agencies, and various strands of the academic literature. The Consensus holds that transnational mining corporations are best placed to drive structurally transformative processes of mining-based development on the continent. State-owned enterprises and local forms of labour-intensive mining are deemed unsuitable. The former is characterized as corrupt and mismanaged, and the latter as an inefficient, subsistence activity with links to conflict financing. Through a detailed case study of gold mining in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Disrupted Development in the Congo reveals the fragile foundations on which this consensus rests. The book documents how foreign mining corporations in the Congo have been prone to mismanagement, inefficiencies, and rent-seeking, and implicated in fuelling conflict and violence. In addition, the book details how structural impediments to the transformative effects of mining industrialization in low-income settings occur irrespective of ownership and management structures. In light of these constraints, and the levels of overseas surplus extraction and domestic marginalization associated with foreign-owned industrial mining, a shift to domestic-owned forms of mining-based development would better meet the needs of low-income African economies for rising productivity, labour absorption, and the domestic retention of the value generated by productive activity than the currently dominant but disarticulated and disruptive foreign corporate-led model.en_US
dc.languageEnglishen_US
dc.relation.ispartofseriesCritical Frontiers of Theory, Research, and Policy in International Development Studiesen_US
dc.subject.otherAfrica, Congo, mining, industrialization, development, corporations, labour, global value chains, conflict, golden_US
dc.titleDisrupted Development in the Congoen_US
dc.title.alternativeThe Fragile Foundations of the African Mining Consensusen_US
dc.typebook
oapen.identifier.doi10.1093/oso/9780192849052.001.0001en_US
oapen.relation.isPublishedByb9501915-cdee-4f2a-8030-9c0b187854b2en_US
oapen.relation.hasChapter8668bb62-8f64-42cd-9a76-afdd54eb39f6
oapen.relation.hasChapter18c6a038-5f12-4b62-9bdf-1c9ea89c7261
oapen.relation.hasChapter002b8a3b-bc98-4bd6-a1da-b00824ac5ad8
oapen.relation.isbn9780192849052
oapen.pages224en_US
oapen.place.publicationOxforden_US


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