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University of Toronto Press
Kapitel
Open Access
Contributors
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Acknowledgments xi
- Foreword xiii
-
SECTION I Introduction
- 1 An Evolving Agenda on Natural Resource–Based Development in Africa 3
-
SECTION II Governance Framings at Local, National, and Global Levels
- 2 Corporate Framing of Sustainability in the Mineral Sector: “New Governance” Insights from South Africa 35
- 3 The Resource Curse and Limits of Petro-Development in Ghana’s “Oil City”: How Oil Production Has Impacted Sekondi-Takoradi 59
- 4 Stakeholder Salience and Resource Enclavity in Sub-Saharan Africa: The Case of Ghana’s Oil 79
- 5 Gender, Land Grabbing, and Glocal Land Governance in Ghana and Uganda 101
- 6 Governing Artisanal Commodity Extraction in Cameroon: A Comparative Analysis of the Gold and Palm Oil Sectors 123
-
SECTION III Critical Approaches to Inclusive Development: The Politics of Resource Nationalism, Local Procurement, and Community Engagement
- 7 Copper Economics and Local Entrepreneurs in Zambia: Accumulation by Dispossession and the Possibility of Dependent Development 149
- 8 “The Curse of Being Born with a Copper Spoon in Our Mouths”: An Examination of the Changing Forms of Zambian Resource Nationalism 173
- 9 Promoting Mining Local Procurement through Systems Change: A Canadian NGO’s Eforts to Improve the Development Impacts of the Global Mining Industry 201
- 10 The Promises and Pitfalls of Pursuing Inclusive, Sustainable Development through Resource Corridors in Africa 221
- 11 “Community Development” in Oil and Gas Projects: The Case of the West African Gas Pipeline Project 239
-
SECTION IV Land and Human Security: Central Africa in Focus
- 12 Land, High-Value Natural Resources, and Conflict in the Central African Republic 263
- 13 Copper Stakes: Exclusion, Corporate Strategies, and Property Rights in the Democratic Republic of Congo 285
- 14 China and the Democratic Republic of Congo: What the Sicomines Agreement Tells Us about Beijing’s Foreign Policy in Africa 305
-
SECTION V Concluding Remarks and Reflections
- 15 Reflections on Natural Resource–Based Development in Africa in the 2020s 329
- Contributors 349
- Index 359
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Acknowledgments xi
- Foreword xiii
-
SECTION I Introduction
- 1 An Evolving Agenda on Natural Resource–Based Development in Africa 3
-
SECTION II Governance Framings at Local, National, and Global Levels
- 2 Corporate Framing of Sustainability in the Mineral Sector: “New Governance” Insights from South Africa 35
- 3 The Resource Curse and Limits of Petro-Development in Ghana’s “Oil City”: How Oil Production Has Impacted Sekondi-Takoradi 59
- 4 Stakeholder Salience and Resource Enclavity in Sub-Saharan Africa: The Case of Ghana’s Oil 79
- 5 Gender, Land Grabbing, and Glocal Land Governance in Ghana and Uganda 101
- 6 Governing Artisanal Commodity Extraction in Cameroon: A Comparative Analysis of the Gold and Palm Oil Sectors 123
-
SECTION III Critical Approaches to Inclusive Development: The Politics of Resource Nationalism, Local Procurement, and Community Engagement
- 7 Copper Economics and Local Entrepreneurs in Zambia: Accumulation by Dispossession and the Possibility of Dependent Development 149
- 8 “The Curse of Being Born with a Copper Spoon in Our Mouths”: An Examination of the Changing Forms of Zambian Resource Nationalism 173
- 9 Promoting Mining Local Procurement through Systems Change: A Canadian NGO’s Eforts to Improve the Development Impacts of the Global Mining Industry 201
- 10 The Promises and Pitfalls of Pursuing Inclusive, Sustainable Development through Resource Corridors in Africa 221
- 11 “Community Development” in Oil and Gas Projects: The Case of the West African Gas Pipeline Project 239
-
SECTION IV Land and Human Security: Central Africa in Focus
- 12 Land, High-Value Natural Resources, and Conflict in the Central African Republic 263
- 13 Copper Stakes: Exclusion, Corporate Strategies, and Property Rights in the Democratic Republic of Congo 285
- 14 China and the Democratic Republic of Congo: What the Sicomines Agreement Tells Us about Beijing’s Foreign Policy in Africa 305
-
SECTION V Concluding Remarks and Reflections
- 15 Reflections on Natural Resource–Based Development in Africa in the 2020s 329
- Contributors 349
- Index 359